mep wrote:First of all decide if you want to build a composite chassis or a steel frame.
If you're a rookie team (this is my assumption for this entire post) or you're completely new to this, I wouldn't be thinking about a composite chassis. If you intend to compete, you need to get a car built, period. Having participated with a rookie team myself, I understand the temptation to think you can show up and blow everyone out of the water. I don't mean to be negative, but you aren't going to win the competition the first year, and that shouldn't be considered a realistic goal. The goal of your design should be absolute reliability. If you have a car that doesn't break down and finishes endurance, which is easier said than done, then you'll be one of the best rookie teams ever. Seriously...
With regards to your questions about chassis design, you've more or less answered them yourself. When you break a car down to its simplest level, the chassis is really nothing more than a huge mounting bracket. There are certain components that have to go in a specific location (give or take a few inches): the driver, engine, drivetrain, suspension pickup points, etc. Working concurrently with the suspension design, you can get an idea for where these components should go, and as mentioned before, you just connect the dots from there. The trick is knowing which dots to connect.
Setting up the load scenario based on inertial and tire forces to see what you're deflection is would be a worthwhile engineering exercise, but don't get too caught up in the minute details trying to decrease deflection by small percentage points. If you see that making a certain change will drastically improve the deflection, then make the change. Otherwise, you're best to just call it 'good enough' and move on with the build. Pluck the low hanging fruit first... As a younger team, if you show up and tell the design judges that you have a deflection/load of XX units/units and you started with a deflection/load of some other number, and that you decided to freeze the iterations because you didn't see any worthwhile gain based on your goal of getting a reliable car built, then they won't think less of you. In fact, they'd like to see that.
I'm assuming you've visited FSAE.com and read through some of the forums already, but if you haven't this thread is a fantastic starting point:
Reasoning your way through the FSAE design process
Best of luck with the design!