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-   -   Tekno SCT410 Thread (https://www.rctech.net/forum/electric-off-road/676777-tekno-sct410-thread.html)

justinco 10-09-2013 09:48 PM


Originally Posted by BOLISARIO (Post 12619594)
I bit the bullet and I will soon be a Tekno SCT410 owner soon. Just waiting for Tower to ship my kit, then I'm GTG. Tower Hobbies member discount code+SCT410=Win.


How does the Tenshock SC411 compare to the HW Xerun 4 pole motors? I'll be using my old HW SCT esc.

I do have a Tekin Pro 4 4600 that I can use but not sure how the Pro4 will hold up when powering this 6 pounder. On my old Durango, it was a missile.

I've used nothing but a pro4 4600 in my SCT410 and it is plenty fast. Although, I have driven trucks with the newer pro4 HD motors and they have noticeably more torque.

fq06 10-09-2013 09:57 PM


Originally Posted by sramos (Post 12619605)
I have that tool and that's what I do. I use the Mugen pins that are a tad longer then stock, that way they have more even wear and won't dig into the inside of the coupler making a divet......now I hope I explained that ok lol

Ahhh... I may swap out my pins before they are due. What the heck, I have about 10 in my box so if that extends the life of the outdrive, I'm in!
That makes sense if they are a little longer the edges wouldn't be getting into the out drives as much. Got a project for tomorrow :tire:

fq06 10-09-2013 10:08 PM


Originally Posted by BOLISARIO (Post 12619594)
How does the Tenshock SC411 compare to the HW Xerun 4 pole motors? I'll be using my old HW SCT esc.

I do have a Tekin Pro 4 4600 that I can use but not sure how the Pro4 will hold up when powering this 6 pounder. On my old Durango, it was a missile.

I ran the TS 411 4600kv then switched to the HW 3656sd.
Both are strong motors. The TS is a 550 can, the HW is like a 545 can, longer than a 540 but shorter than a 550.

The TS has a smoother bottom end and nice top end.
The HW has tree stump pulling bottom end and a little better top end.
Overall, the HW has more power according to my butt dyno :D

Any of the 4 pole motors out will have no problem with the Tekno. My Mugen conversion has about a 1/4 lb more weight and the tells run nearly identical. You may find that your temps are lower in this 1/8 based truck than they are in the scte or AE or Durango or whatever 1/10 based truck your coming from.

I have a hard time getting my motor temp over 140° (HW or TS, HW is about 10° less) with stupid ESC timing added in on 10+ minute practice runs.

Terence 10-09-2013 10:24 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I just got my sct410 and finish build cant wait to test it, but can someone teach me how to screw this screw ? how it work ? thx
:nod:

mydudrevo 10-09-2013 10:31 PM

That's a droop screw it's a tuning screw used to limit the downward travel of your suspension. I run full droop which means no screws

fq06 10-09-2013 10:58 PM

Yeah, some run full droop, some limit droop. Read the Hudy setup guide to understand its affect. Generally more droop at an outdoor track than an indoor track.

If your going to setup your truck and follow a setup sheet from Tekno's website, the measurement is from the center of the lower shock mount screw to the center of the upper shock mount post.
So when it says 119mm of droop in the rear, that's 119mm eye to eye on the shock.
I do think shock location on the tower and maybe the arm will affect and throw off that measurement if you are not using the same mounting locations but trying to use the same droop measurement so if your going to follow someone's droop recommendation, you need to use their shock mount locations.

Would probably be best to measure droop the traditional way but I guess that may require people to use a setup board and other tools that come at a cost. So eye to eye you only need calipers which most everyone has and harbor freight has for a couple bucks.

BLbound 10-10-2013 12:13 AM


Originally Posted by fq06 (Post 12619500)
Instead of buying a new bone, replace the pins. I think the Mugen pins are the same size, I have some but haven't tried it yet as their not worn.

Done it a ton of times on my Mugen, you just get a small socket and put it on one side of the bone and put it in a vice. Turn the vice down and the pin will push out till you get it flush with the bone.
Now turn the vice back out and put the new pin on the old pin that's flush with the socket still in place and crank down again. The new pin will push the old pin the rest of the way out and you have a fresh pin ready to go :D
Hope I explained that ok :lol:

Cool, thanks for the tip fq! You explained it just fine...funny thing is I just bought a vice last week! :nod: Thanks!

BLbound 10-10-2013 12:14 AM


Originally Posted by sramos (Post 12619605)
I have that tool and that's what I do. I use the Magen pins that are a tad longer then stock, that way they have more even wear and won't dig into the inside of the coupler making a divet......now I hope I explained that ok lol

Thanks sramos! I'll have to pick some mugen pins...another order to A Main!

Graham11 10-10-2013 05:14 AM


Originally Posted by fq06 (Post 12619718)
Yeah, some run full droop, some limit droop. Read the Hudy setup guide to understand its affect. Generally more droop at an outdoor track than an indoor track.

If your going to setup your truck and follow a setup sheet from Tekno's website, the measurement is from the center of the lower shock mount screw to the center of the upper shock mount post.
So when it says 119mm of droop in the rear, that's 119mm eye to eye on the shock.
I do think shock location on the tower and maybe the arm will affect and throw off that measurement if you are not using the same mounting locations but trying to use the same droop measurement so if your going to follow someone's droop recommendation, you need to use their shock mount locations.

Would probably be best to measure droop the traditional way but I guess that may require people to use a setup board and other tools that come at a cost. So eye to eye you only need calipers which most everyone has and harbor freight has for a couple bucks.

Just to expound and/or clarify this well said instruction, the shock needs to be at full extension when measuring eye to eye, in other words hold the truck off the ground until the arm can't hang any lower and the shock is at full travel as if you are in mid air on a jump with all wheels hanging down

colormegone 10-10-2013 06:24 AM

2 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by fq06 (Post 12619634)
Ahhh... I may swap out my pins before they are due. What the heck, I have about 10 in my box so if that extends the life of the outdrive, I'm in!
That makes sense if they are a little longer the edges wouldn't be getting into the out drives as much. Got a project for tomorrow :tire:

This is the simple tool I made for removing and replacing the drive pins..
1/4" thick pc of aluminum with two 9/64" hole drilled all the way thru.
I made two holes for the Tekno rear drive line since it wears the most.
Set the drive line in the holes and tap the pins down with a small hammer.
Then I use a drift punch to knock them all the way out. Tap the new 3mm x 12.8 Mugen pins back in and your done. You can do this at the track if need be...

egobrkr 10-10-2013 06:26 AM


Originally Posted by BOLISARIO (Post 12619594)
I bit the bullet and I will soon be a Tekno SCT410 owner soon. Just waiting for Tower to ship my kit, then I'm GTG. Tower Hobbies member discount code+SCT410=Win.


How does the Tenshock SC411 compare to the HW Xerun 4 pole motors? I'll be using my old HW SCT esc.

I do have a Tekin Pro 4 4600 that I can use but not sure how the Pro4 will hold up when powering this 6 pounder. On my old Durango, it was a missile.

Any of them motors will power this kit fine. I use a novak 4.5t 550 can 2pole motor with out any issues in the power department. I run 15t pinion and 20degs of timing in the esc and my motor after 6mins main is 140deg.

fq06 10-10-2013 07:46 AM


Originally Posted by colormegone (Post 12620212)
This is the simple tool I made for removing and replacing the drive pins..
1/4" thick pc of aluminum with two 9/64" hole drilled all the way thru.
I made two holes for the Tekno rear drive line since it wears the most.
Set the drive line in the holes and tap the pins down with a small hammer.
Then I use a drift punch to knock them all the way out. Tap the new 3mm x 12.8 Mugen pins back in and your done. You can do this at the track if need be...

Great idea, make that two projects for today :D

colormegone 10-10-2013 07:58 AM


Originally Posted by fq06 (Post 12620429)
Great idea, make that two projects for today :D

Thanks..
Just use one hole for all the other drive line lengths and you have the whole package. :nod:

Mizchief 10-10-2013 08:57 AM


Originally Posted by fq06 (Post 12619718)
Yeah, some run full droop, some limit droop. Read the Hudy setup guide to understand its affect. Generally more droop at an outdoor track than an indoor track.

If your going to setup your truck and follow a setup sheet from Tekno's website, the measurement is from the center of the lower shock mount screw to the center of the upper shock mount post.
So when it says 119mm of droop in the rear, that's 119mm eye to eye on the shock.
I do think shock location on the tower and maybe the arm will affect and throw off that measurement if you are not using the same mounting locations but trying to use the same droop measurement so if your going to follow someone's droop recommendation, you need to use their shock mount locations.

Would probably be best to measure droop the traditional way but I guess that may require people to use a setup board and other tools that come at a cost. So eye to eye you only need calipers which most everyone has and harbor freight has for a couple bucks.

I agree on the real droop gauge. The shock measurement only works because it's assuming for that setup your using the mounting positions as specified on the same sheet. But if you wanted to make a tweak to the mounting but maintain your droop setting you would have to measure using the real tools.

I don't have the droop tools so I basically use the measurement listed then tweak the screws by feel.

BOLISARIO 10-10-2013 10:18 AM

Tires
 
What's the ultimate indoor, clay tires nowadays? Still barcodes?


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