Hpi Pro 4
Tech Addict
iTrader: (4)
Nice to hear....
i hope hoping against something like that. there's nothing wrong with the current suspension stuff.
And because i have the pro4, my next buy will have to be a cyclone!! Or.. maybe a pro5.. but i would guess that's a ways off yet..
i hope hoping against something like that. there's nothing wrong with the current suspension stuff.
And because i have the pro4, my next buy will have to be a cyclone!! Or.. maybe a pro5.. but i would guess that's a ways off yet..
pro5 would be pretty interesting.
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
Tech Elite
iTrader: (3)
Originally Posted by floodo1
pro5 would be pretty interesting.
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
Tech Master
iTrader: (4)
does anyone have the Pro 4 carpet setup? thanks
Originally Posted by kewdawg
Designing a new shaft (the Pro 5) is an obvious next move. Both cars can easily exist under the same umbrella. Other companies have already shown this to be true. No mystery, here. The shaft drive, by no means, was a design flaw. The higher "CG" is just a product of technological, design advancements made by others companies who have released new kits since the Pro 4's 2+ year old release date.
as the shaft sits in the pro4 its still too low to get a steering system that is even close to the xray/cyclone style. then if you lower the shaft even more (for cg) then you would have to make the steering system sit above the shaft, and thats not possible with the pro4 knuckles.
so thats a major design consideration in continuing with a shaft drive car.
Dont get me wrong, i'd like my pro4 to have lower cg, and be a new car!!!! shaft drive IS nice for stock
Tech Champion
iTrader: (9)
Originally Posted by Guo Chean
does anyone have the Pro 4 carpet setup? thanks
Tech Master
iTrader: (4)
Originally Posted by rc-zombies
Hara's? foams or rubber on carpet?
Tech Lord
iTrader: (38)
Originally Posted by Guo Chean
what ever as long as carpet setup
Tech Master
Originally Posted by floodo1
pro5 would be pretty interesting.
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
lowering the drivetrain is pretty obvious, as yokomo has already shown how to lower a shaft drive cg. but then you run into more steering setup issues. Obviously the current trend is to have the steering tie rods be as long as possible (as evidenced by tamiya's new steering design at the worlds), but that doesnt reconcile very well with a shaft running right down the middle! also keeping the pro4 steering knucles makes this harder to solve, since you cant change the location of the ballstud to accomodate for bellcrank changes...
really tho, im suprised that hpi sees a market large enough for a shaft drive car. with the cyclone they where able to fix the 2 big flaws of the pro4 (shaft drive, and high cg) as well as add a lot of benefits (light drivetrain, less bearings in drivetrain, x ray style steering (low ackerman), finally now blades on the "dogbone", etc). so its suprising that enough people are still interested in the shaft to keep a market going for them to make a shaft drive pro5
not to mention that the cyclone s, puts a wierd twist on things too.
we'll see how it goes down!
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
The Pro4 is a great car. I am not bias. I wouldn't buy it if it wasn't. I trust that HPI will surely come up with a better shaft driven car than the Pro4.
Some manufacturers may have designed cars not well enough but there is always room for improvements. That's is why they come up with hop-up parts. In that way, those parts make the cars more stable and better.
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
I'm 99% sure that once the Pro5 comes out, Hara will be driving it too.
It's up to the driver's skill regardless of the drivetrain. Not just the drivetrain alone!
Tech Master
iTrader: (4)
Originally Posted by xxxkat
Stock or Mod., 3mm Chassis or 2.5mm.
Tech Master
iTrader: (4)
Originally Posted by Nicadrauspro4
You're comments maybe considered but just leave the job to HPI. I'm sure they know what they're doing.
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
The Pro4 is a great car. I am not bias. I wouldn't buy it if it wasn't. I trust that HPI will surely come up with a better shaft driven car than the Pro4.
Some manufacturers may have designed cars not well enough but there is always room for improvements. That's is why they come up with hop-up parts. In that way, those parts make the cars more stable and better.
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
I'm 99% sure that once the Pro5 comes out, Hara will be driving it too.
It's up to the driver's skill regardless of the drivetrain. Not just the drivetrain alone!
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
The Pro4 is a great car. I am not bias. I wouldn't buy it if it wasn't. I trust that HPI will surely come up with a better shaft driven car than the Pro4.
Some manufacturers may have designed cars not well enough but there is always room for improvements. That's is why they come up with hop-up parts. In that way, those parts make the cars more stable and better.
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
I'm 99% sure that once the Pro5 comes out, Hara will be driving it too.
It's up to the driver's skill regardless of the drivetrain. Not just the drivetrain alone!
Tech Lord
iTrader: (38)
Originally Posted by Nicadrauspro4
You're comments maybe considered but just leave the job to HPI. I'm sure they know what they're doing.
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
I'm 99% sure that once the Pro5 comes out, Hara will be driving it too.
It's up to the driver's skill regardless of the drivetrain. Not just the drivetrain alone!
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
I'm 99% sure that once the Pro5 comes out, Hara will be driving it too.
It's up to the driver's skill regardless of the drivetrain. Not just the drivetrain alone!
Originally Posted by Nicadrauspro4
Just curious, have you even designed a whole car to criticize other designs? Are you a "so exert" on finding flaws with touring cars?
Originally Posted by Nicadrauspro4
There are so many people discouraging other people from driving shaft. Why? They say it's better on modified motors. Not true! Surikarn kicked a lot of belted cars with his Evo 3. Hara and Andy Moore beat a lot of belts with their Pro4. All in modified classes.
You have to ask yourself why hpi didnt develop the cyclone as a shaft drive car. Major factors I'm guessing are: low cg with belts, belts allow for xray style bellcrank (ackerman), belt drive uses long bulkheads therefore flexing chassis much differntly than pro4, shaft drive has torque issues, etc. As you can see this is quite a few differences between shaft and belt.
The simple point is, using a shaft brings a LOT of design constraints, as compared to the cyclone, which is the current generation for HPI/HB. I'm sure HPI/HB is capable of figuring something kewl out.
Tech Master
iTrader: (1)
As much as I know the Pro 4 will be last among the shaft tourers of hpi. They dont plan to come out with anything like it. Well seems this shaftee will be forever.
Tech Addict
iTrader: (4)
I have an unexpected race coming up at a venue i have no experience racing at...
Does anyone have a setup for an indoor asphalt circuit?
I assume it'll be tight and twisty..
I've also been told it will have reasonable grip. Not high, but not too bad either.
And it's quite bumpy for an indoor track!!
Setups setups!! LoL.. i'm flying blind...
Does anyone have a setup for an indoor asphalt circuit?
I assume it'll be tight and twisty..
I've also been told it will have reasonable grip. Not high, but not too bad either.
And it's quite bumpy for an indoor track!!
Setups setups!! LoL.. i'm flying blind...