Good value setup station
#16
Tech Adept
Setup
I agree, Hudy's setup stations are the best. As for whether or not you need a setup station, it's the only way to get your car to handle consistantly. My car goes on the setup station before every run, practice or racing, and everytime I put my car on the track I know exactly how it is going to handle. I see alot of guys at my local track that don't use setup stations and there cars handle differently every race. They are an invaluable tool, and money well spent. Just my two cents.
#17
Tech Addict
iTrader: (6)
I agree, Hudy's setup stations are the best. As for whether or not you need a setup station, it's the only way to get your car to handle consistantly. My car goes on the setup station before every run, practice or racing, and everytime I put my car on the track I know exactly how it is going to handle. I see alot of guys at my local track that don't use setup stations and there cars handle differently every race. They are an invaluable tool, and money well spent. Just my two cents.
I would be that person your talking about, my eyes arent cutting it any more!
Im looking for a set up board my self, and I have some hudy tools and they are the best by far, so i think im going to get there system.
#18
You guys need to see the light,
Setup wheels, drawing triangle, and a set of shims or feeler gauges in 0.1mm incraments, from 1-1.8mm or so. Add a 30cm steel rule to check toe, a quality droop/ride hight gaug and a flat surface. And a white pencil or chalk to mark the tires (thats for rubber tires)
So you think your hudy setup station is good? Wheel i run -1.2mm front chamber and 1.4mm rear at my local track. Measure that!
Dont knock it till you try it. Spend some time at the track with fresh tires, and draw a white chalk line across them, go and do 2-3 laps and bring the car in. Notice the the wear on the line and adjust chamber accordingly, do another 2-3 laps and so on... you will find a really good sweet spot
Yes i used setup stations too once apon a time.
Setup wheels, drawing triangle, and a set of shims or feeler gauges in 0.1mm incraments, from 1-1.8mm or so. Add a 30cm steel rule to check toe, a quality droop/ride hight gaug and a flat surface. And a white pencil or chalk to mark the tires (thats for rubber tires)
So you think your hudy setup station is good? Wheel i run -1.2mm front chamber and 1.4mm rear at my local track. Measure that!
Dont knock it till you try it. Spend some time at the track with fresh tires, and draw a white chalk line across them, go and do 2-3 laps and bring the car in. Notice the the wear on the line and adjust chamber accordingly, do another 2-3 laps and so on... you will find a really good sweet spot
Yes i used setup stations too once apon a time.
#19
I'll stick my oar in as I always do in these kind of threads.
"Setup stations" are a waste of time. When do you ever race your car with 5mm acrylic squares instead of tyres?
Best setup system is a flat board (Hudy sell their own boards seperately, I got the 1/10th version for £12.99 UK), a camber gauge (RPM is reliable and easy to use) and a ride height gauge (I use a 3racing one, you can also use it to measure droop if you place the chassis flat on the board without tyres).
Put the wheels you will be using on the car (assuming they are not distorted), set your ride height first, then your droop, tweak, cambers etc, recheck and you are good to go. Total expense under £30 UK. And probably a better setup car than any setup station would give you.
"Setup stations" are a waste of time. When do you ever race your car with 5mm acrylic squares instead of tyres?
Best setup system is a flat board (Hudy sell their own boards seperately, I got the 1/10th version for £12.99 UK), a camber gauge (RPM is reliable and easy to use) and a ride height gauge (I use a 3racing one, you can also use it to measure droop if you place the chassis flat on the board without tyres).
Put the wheels you will be using on the car (assuming they are not distorted), set your ride height first, then your droop, tweak, cambers etc, recheck and you are good to go. Total expense under £30 UK. And probably a better setup car than any setup station would give you.
#20
Tech Master
iTrader: (4)
I would have to agree on this, getting to an extreme degree of accuracy is not necessary. You don't have to use a setup station to recheck everything, all that can be done with a droop gauge, ride height gauge, camber gauge, and a tweak station. Assuming your rims aren't distorted.
#21
Tech Addict
iTrader: (3)
set-up station
The Hudy All-in-one station works really well. Before I go to the race, I set up my car up on the station and it runs as perfect as I want it to. It goes straight down the line without clicking a notch to the left or the right. I actually set my front tow while the radio is on. Once I start racing, I don't use the set-up station unless I take a big hit. I use a credit card for a camber gage. After a while you'll know how to measure the distance between 1.5 to 2.0 degrees of camber by eyeing it. Camber gauges are nice but I temp my tires after every run and make sure I get even temperature on both sides of the tire. This keeps my tire wear even and I save on tires. Efficiency is important when you race as much as we do. Hope this helps...
#22
Tech Elite
iTrader: (24)
I would have to agree on this, getting to an extreme degree of accuracy is not necessary. You don't have to use a setup station to recheck everything, all that can be done with a droop gauge, ride height gauge, camber gauge, and a tweak station. Assuming your rims aren't distorted.
I use the Speedmind setup station. Its just like the hudy.
#23
Tech Adept
yeah thats right that guy was probably blown at that time
#24
Tech Adept
The Hudy All-in-one station works really well. Before I go to the race, I set up my car up on the station and it runs as perfect as I want it to. It goes straight down the line without clicking a notch to the left or the right. I actually set my front tow while the radio is on. Once I start racing, I don't use the set-up station unless I take a big hit. I use a credit card for a camber gage. After a while you'll know how to measure the distance between 1.5 to 2.0 degrees of camber by eyeing it. Camber gauges are nice but I temp my tires after every run and make sure I get even temperature on both sides of the tire. This keeps my tire wear even and I save on tires. Efficiency is important when you race as much as we do. Hope this helps...
#25
Does anyone know if the teammagic setup comes with a toe-in guage? I think that's what it is. Anyway it's the clear plastic plate.
#27
#28
Tech Apprentice
I recently heard of this brand of setup station:
http://www.rc-setup.com/
http://www.rc-setup.com/
Price and quality has great balance - I really can recommend this set for those who are not ready to invest a bunch of money.
Readability could be a little bit better in certain lightning conditions, but that is the only negative thing I have experienced.
#29
I thought that one does but it only goes to like 10 degrees making it useless for checking how far your steering goes. I might be thinking of another station though but almost sure it was the magic one. I looked at them all before going with the Hudy. Hudy is really easy to read and I like it a lot more than the Integy. If I did it over again I would just get the gauges and not the full set up system though. Haven't used the tweak thing yet.
#30
Tech Addict
iTrader: (3)
camber
Yes, exactly. I usually start with -1.5 degrees in the front and -2 degrees in the rear. I'm always checking it at track as the day goes by with a Dave and Buster card. A lot of times I find myself adjusting camber according to the track and how the tire is wearing. Plus, rotating tires helps when trying to get the best performance without having to use more sets.