Frame: There’s many ways to strengthen the frame, most of the time you’re very limited by the rules. If your frame is rusty don’t bother it won’t make that much of a difference, just use your front more than the back because the frame in front is preserved from engine oils more in front than in back. Just remember you can’t unweld a frame, so follow the rules. Weld all frame seams bumpers to bumper if allowed. This is the frame weakness. You can weld leaf springs inside of the hump, roll your car over and pour concrete into the hump, chain and cable the whole length of the frame, heat treat it, weld plates everywhere, shove iron in from the trunk and open up your frame and line the inside with angle iron. All this works, but it’s way to much work for a 20 minute demo and most of the time something else will take you out before your frame bends. Keep it simple and have fun! We have resisted notching our back frame for years because it just seemed wrong to weaken your frame in any way. But we finally tried it on a few cars and it works great. It rolls into your trunk, allowing you to see and takes alot of pressure off your hump. To do this take a good size(inch or so)notch out of the top of the frame just foward of the bumper brackets. This varies depending on model, but works on any make or year. "V" this down to about halfway through the frame on both sides.
Wiring: You need two toggle switches, one pushbutton switch, two thick battery cables and save some thick wire when you're stripping. The first toggle switch provides power to the distributor, run a positive wire from the battery through a toggle switch and to the back left post(orange wire) on the distributor; the other is for the alternator, connect all the wires together on the alternator and run them through a toggle to the positive battery post. If you want to run a dumbie light (to tell if your motor is running) then take the small brown wire off the alternator and run in through a small light and to ground. The push button is for the starter solenoid "S" terminal. Run the positive battery cable directly to the large starter post and the negative to the back of the engine block. Don’t run it to the frame. Be sure to clean the contact point throughly before attaching.
You don’t need an alternator if you have a good battery fully charged. If your front end is really smashed then turn it off to keep it from grounding out your battery. Don’t ever leave your switches on, you’ll drain your battery through the alternator coils and you’ll fry your distributor. Cover all the wires in old garden hose and duct tape to protect them. I have a whole page of other wiring diagrams for Chevy, Ford, Dodge, dual battery setup etc.....
Gas Tank: The best gas tank is a fuel cell but a metal boat tank works great. Place it in the back on the driver side. Use seatbelts and form a >< pattern through the handle. Use self-taping screws and work your way toward the tank making the straps tighter as you go. You can also use ready rod with a piece of flat steel across the top. Just don’t over tighten it and don’t leave too much out the bottom to catch bumpers on the track. Get a see-through in-line fuel filter and run STP gas treatment to keep your carb running good. Run the fuel line between the front seats and through the heater core hole. You can also use many different additives, such as, lead, 2 cycle oil, kerosene, octane boost, alcohol, Mystery Oil, etc... I can't really say which ones work best except straight 87 octane gas. Try them all and tell me which ones worked for you.