![]() |
Originally Posted by OSherman
(Post 14473641)
ZoomZoom
Originally Posted by antlockyer
(Post 14473711)
Raced again last night.
Next heat I turned down my steering on my tx and didn't put additive on the rear. Didn't have enough steering. Good idea you used dual rate to cut out some of the steering. If the car is turning like in a V instead of a smooth U pattern, it could be that your inner tire is lifting off the ground mid-turn causing that snappy boomerang kind of turn from the stiff diff setting. If that is the case lessening the diff stiffness can help, stiffer front damper setting (harder springs, stabilizer) can also help, giving the tires a tad more droop can also help. For beginners the near open diff setting is probably easier to drive, meaning use only one additional shim per side or just add one extra shim on one side for slight LSD action. Might want to give that a try first. And don't worry about finishing in the top 5. Practice until you can run a whole battery pack without hitting anything... well, unless there are other drivers messing up your apex. :rolleyes: |
Originally Posted by antlockyer
(Post 14473711)
Raced again last night.
Very tight technical track. In practice I was getting most of the circuit ok but really struggled on the tightest part. First heat and I was awful, essentially crashed non stop. Felt like I had too much steering, it would crash then basically crash again as I tried to rejoin the race. Fishtail from barrier to barrier lol. Next heat I turned down my steering on my tx and didn't put additive on the rear. Didn't have enough steering. Next heat I lowered the car 2mm and put additive back on and added the steering back.This was a bit better and I realised that some of the crashing was due to wheelspin and losing control. I was 2 laps up on my first heat. For most of the track I was as fast as everyone else but that one part of the track killed me nearly every lap. Into the final and it was much the same only with more people and more carnage :) Had a lot of fun, I can't help feel that switching back to the stock open diff might make the car easier to drive. We've found that sometimes is good to sauce only the outter half of the from tires and the whole rear tires. This all depends on the track conditions of course, but it might be something for you to consider Since you're saying your pushing. Keep us updated of your progress! And remember this is fun too! |
Originally Posted by OSherman
(Post 14473641)
ZoomZoom
Ohhhhhh. Daddy Like !:nod: |
Break time..
1 Attachment(s)
A quick step back in time to my M01, installed a rear stabilizer bar to supplement the custom front bar I made a while back.
I used the front silver bar on the rear as there was just too much play with the thinner black bar that was supposed to be used on the rear. Turns out the stiffness is pretty much perfect with my custom front bar. Car runs quite nice now with minimal roll through the switch back. :D |
We race on carpet. Went to the bigger track today and the openNess made it much easier. After a few laps I was getting through with only the occasional barrier incident.
After heat one my car failed scrutineering for being too low. Raised it up and for heat 2 it was much harder to drive and I was 4 laps down on my heat 1 performance. For heat 3 I put stiffer springs front and rear to try to get back some of the feeling I had in heat one. Much better with me being on the same lap as a couple of the other more experienced guys. My fastest lap within 4 tenths of the guy who one the B mains the last 2 meetings. For the race them I left it as it was and was taking some parts of the track much better than others and had made up some places in the first couple of minutes, then I put it roof side down though and couldn't catch back up. I'm pretty sure my fastest lap will be faster again. My 7 year old daughter had a go during free practice and now wants her own mini :) |
Originally Posted by antlockyer
(Post 14474903)
We race on carpet. Went to the bigger track today and the openNess made it much easier. After a few laps I was getting through with only the occasional barrier incident.
After heat one my car failed scrutineering for being too low. Raised it up and for heat 2 it was much harder to drive and I was 4 laps down on my heat 1 performance. For heat 3 I put stiffer springs front and rear to try to get back some of the feeling I had in heat one. Much better with me being on the same lap as a couple of the other more experienced guys. My fastest lap within 4 tenths of the guy who one the B mains the last 2 meetings. For the race them I left it as it was and was taking some parts of the track much better than others and had made up some places in the first couple of minutes, then I put it roof side down though and couldn't catch back up. I'm pretty sure my fastest lap will be faster again. My 7 year old daughter had a go during free practice and now wants her own mini :) Sounds as if its coming down just getting more practice on getting around the track now! Good Luck BTW on your 7yo! Go For it Golddust started when he was 10 and hasn't looked back! Its a great way to make memories with them!!! |
Hi need help urgent im building my m05 mini cooper racin and i got it with everythin included it has a standard motor and a tamiya brushless esc tble-02 im unsure what cables go to what and the manual doesnt help at all any ideas many thanks
|
1 Attachment(s)
Originally Posted by OSherman
(Post 14473641)
ZoomZoom
Here ya my Old Skool zoom zoom lol |
minijay- You wont be using the orange wire since you are using the silver can. Just hook up the yellow to yellow, blue to green.
As for setup, I'm just going by memory so I hope this is correct. Once you have your motor and battery connected, you want to make sure that the TBLE's LED is lit GREEN for your silver can. Then push the setup button once on the TBLE, it will flash RED slowly, pull your transmitter throttle trigger all the way (forward throttle caliberation), then press the setup button again, it will flash RED rapidly, push your throttle trigger all the way forward (brake/reverse caliberation), then push the setup button again to end setup. That should be enough to get you going for now. Make sure you take the time to read the TBLE manual though, I know it can appear frustrating. Majority of the features listed in the manual are for brushless motor setup though. |
Originally Posted by Minijaym
(Post 14475209)
Hi need help urgent im building my m05 mini cooper racin and i got it with everythin included it has a standard motor and a tamiya brushless esc tble-02 im unsure what cables go to what and the manual doesnt help at all any ideas many thanks
If you're wondering about plugging into your receiver, that will be specific to the receiver you have. Can't help you there. Generally speaking, however, steering is CH2, throttle is CH3 and the darker coloured wire (ground) generally goes to the outside edge of the receiver. Edit: found a cool video on dealing with Tamiya's silly lifepo4 voltage cutoff. Probably a similar procedure available for their other models.
|
|||||
Originally Posted by monkeyracing
(Post 14475504)
If you're wondering about plugging into your receiver, that will be specific to the receiver you have. Can't help you there. Generally speaking, however, steering is CH2, throttle is CH3.
|
Originally Posted by howardcano
(Post 14475618)
Are you sure about those channel numbers, Monk?
|
Originally Posted by monkeyracing
(Post 14475621)
Nope. All my receivers are marked with ST and TH, so I've never had to think about it. They'd appear to be in those positions though.
|
The way I remember the channels are
R transponder S. Steering T throttle |
or as I was told, once upon a time by Mr. Tekin
1 to turn 2 to burn :) |
| All times are GMT -7. It is currently 07:42 AM. |
Powered By: vBulletin v3.9.3.9 Patch Level 3
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.