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-   -   Tamiya mini cooper (https://www.rctech.net/forum/electric-road/20068-tamiya-mini-cooper.html)

sakadachi 06-28-2016 05:04 PM


Originally Posted by eR1c (Post 14583651)
Yes, we had an open dirt area too, ..it was a very large area as our home was on a new development. There were about 7 kids all about the same age in our neighborhood who all had RC cars. What I can remember being represented was:
-a few Tamiya Frogs
-1 Tamiya Hornet (my car)
-1 Tamiya Wild Willy Jeep
-1 Tamiya Hot Shot (this was a bad ass car back in the day) ...i believe it was the only one w/ 4 wheel drive
-1 RC10 (my one friend lived w/ his dad and got all the coolest toys). That RC10 was super awesome!

It was a great scene seeing all these RC vehicles racing around all day long. We'd make tracks and play games of RC tag. Good fun. ...one thing I remember w/the mechanical speed controls was that they were always blowing fuses. I think the stock fuses were way too weak, ...so we'd take the fuses out and hardwire everything. The good 'ol days!

Sounds like fun! Yeah, while my HotShot was very cool, my friend's dad's RC10 was in a completely different league with the Hurricane? Tornado? motor. Unbelievable handling and power. My mechanical speed controllers were all the junk kit Tamiya 3 step ones so did not come with fuses, only those ceramic resistor blocks we all burned our fingers on. :lol:

Those were definitely good times. We all just had fun with RC.

eR1c 07-01-2016 01:19 PM

Ha, I remember the ceramic resistor blocks (and burning my fingers too)!

sakadachi 07-03-2016 06:26 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I got the big bores installed on my M05. Not bad, very smooth riding using the 2 and 3 hole black pistons. :D

More pictures in my albums page.

eR1c 07-05-2016 10:00 AM

Sakadachi,
Your M05 looks sweet. I love the look of the big bores and those treaded tires! -very nice.

sakadachi 07-05-2016 10:50 AM


Originally Posted by eR1c (Post 14591199)
Sakadachi,
Your M05 looks sweet. I love the look of the big bores and those treaded tires! -very nice.

Thanks, eR1c. :D

With the fine height adjustment I can do now vs the perched CVA SuperMini's I was able to really dial in the car. :D

filippimini 07-08-2016 12:19 AM

I've been playing with my SWB m05 trying to get it to handle as well as my MWB. I really want to run my Mini Cooper body for racing, but at the moment the MWB with Blitzt GT body is still quicker. I'm slowly getting there.

One major difference between the two cars is that on the MWB I am using the V2 chassis and running square lipo packs. Whereas on the SWB I am running the original chassis with round battery pack. The trouble is, the leads coming out the end of the round body push on the body and distort it. This results in the wheel arches rubbing on the tyres. This is not helped by the fact that we run larger wheels (ride mc38). I don't want to spend money on this second car as its really only for testing.

Has anyone got a solution for this?

sakadachi 07-08-2016 04:46 AM

Yes, check my albums for how I velcro the leads. I have no oddball bulge on my Rover Mini bodies on any of my various chassis including the M05.

funked1 07-09-2016 12:41 AM

I built and tested my Ver II R and it's pretty good. I had to put the yellow kit springs in front and the reds in back to reduce oversteer, but otherwise I am just running the kit setup.

One question:
The threaded shock collars turn too easily. Just the vibration of running the car will cause them to drift. Unlike other cars I have built, they don't have the o-ring that goes in the shock collar, in fact there is no groove inside the collar to fit an o-ring. Any ideas on how to cure this?

sakadachi 07-09-2016 03:58 AM

I usually run minimal droop in those situations and apply light pre-load on the springs and spring seats/adjustment collar.

Most of my cars run the similar adjustment collar dampers. None of them use the rubber o-rings as it distorts the setting. I've not had any issues on the same BigBores I installed on my M03 and M05 the other day, btw. :)

gigaplex 07-09-2016 07:55 AM


Originally Posted by funked1 (Post 14595447)
I built and tested my Ver II R and it's pretty good. I had to put the yellow kit springs in front and the reds in back to reduce oversteer, but otherwise I am just running the kit setup.

One question:
The threaded shock collars turn too easily. Just the vibration of running the car will cause them to drift. Unlike other cars I have built, they don't have the o-ring that goes in the shock collar, in fact there is no groove inside the collar to fit an o-ring. Any ideas on how to cure this?

I'd suggest trying threadlock.

finewayne 07-09-2016 08:34 AM

put a 3s in there?

KA2AEV 07-09-2016 01:31 PM

If you're gonna use threadlock, just use the Tempory one. if you use Locktite, use the Blue stuff NOT the Red Locktite, Red locktite is forever (LOL!)

rctechuser015851 07-09-2016 02:17 PM

I have a hopped up m05 never raced for sale. If anyone's interested Pm me for details I have plenty of pics. Pretty much every option and many spares and hop ups NIP.

Laguna Bozo 07-09-2016 05:42 PM

funked1,
Even the blue thread lock is too severe to use on shock bodies. Take a box cutter and scribe a line down the shock body threads. You'll probably have to scribe twice. The adjusters will still turn with finger pressure, but won't change setting as you run. Good luck.

KA2AEV 07-09-2016 06:01 PM


Originally Posted by Laguna Bozo (Post 14596060)
funked1,
Even the blue thread lock is too severe to use on shock bodies. Take a box cutter and scribe a line down the shock body threads. You'll probably have to scribe twice. The adjusters will still turn with finger pressure, but won't change setting as you run. Good luck.

Oh Great idea Bozo!!! One of the TC guys showed me that trick and I forgot about it!!!
Thanks for reminding me!!!


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