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

minimanintaiwan 09-24-2007 10:12 PM


Originally Posted by larlee (Post 3701666)
a touring insert(soft, med or hard?) on top of 60D hard inserts and squeeze into the tires? wow...isn't that a little too hard? how are you able to glue it?

soft inserts. its tricky and takes time getting at all in but gluing is the easiest part once you get it all perfectly snug.

Takt 09-25-2007 10:45 AM

I've been told to put o-rings under the shock piston to set droop. Can someone tell me which o-rings to use?

Thanks

gibbous 09-25-2007 10:52 AM


Originally Posted by Takt (Post 3705334)
I've been told to put o-rings under the shock piston to set droop. Can someone tell me which o-rings to use?

Thanks

I'm really bored at work, so I'll take a jab at this.

I don't think it matters. Use whatever you got so long as you get the desired droop. You could even use plastic spacers, but o-rings are usually pretty plentiful and they fit the shaft perfectly.

OSherman 09-25-2007 11:09 AM


Originally Posted by gibbous (Post 3705351)
I'm really bored at work, so I'll take a jab at this.

I don't think it matters. Use whatever you got so long as you get the desired droop. You could even use plastic spacers, but o-rings are usually pretty plentiful and they fit the shaft perfectly.

:nod::):nod:

The real mystery is HOW MANY??

Hawk6 09-25-2007 11:21 AM

I think I remember reading - maybe on rc-mini.net - that the center of mounting hole to center of mounting hole max length of the shock should be 56mm, down from 61mm -- so basically shorten the stock about 1/4" or a little less.

Takt 09-25-2007 01:25 PM

Scott --

I have the plastic spacer on the shaft under the shock body as well. Should I run both the o-rings in the shock body AND teh plastic spacer under neath?

Thanks

TryHard 09-25-2007 01:54 PM


Originally Posted by Takt (Post 3705688)
Scott --

I have the plastic spacer on the shaft under the shock body as well. Should I run both the o-rings in the shock body AND teh plastic spacer under neath?

Thanks

I've removed the plastic spacer completey, and now run two white o-rings, and a 1mm alloy spacer. Seems to give me plenty of drop, and a shock length ~57mm. I've got the spacer between the two o0rings as well, and this way I can (kinda) tune the droop a little, by using a bigger spacer if needed.

HiH
Ed

Hawk6 09-25-2007 01:59 PM


Originally Posted by Takt (Post 3705688)
Scott --

I have the plastic spacer on the shaft under the shock body as well. Should I run both the o-rings in the shock body AND teh plastic spacer under neath?

Thanks

I don't have a plastic spacer UNDER the shock body. When you put the spacer INSIDE the shock body on the shaft (either o-rings or plastic spacer) the shock will shorten so much I don't think you'll have room for anything on the outside other the the spring retainer on the bottom of the shock.

With the internal spacers (and the spring retainer on the shock), total shock travel is 1/4" or even less, I think.

By the way Tim, I think Derek and I are going to race at Trackside this Saturday to get some practice in before the big Mini Mayhem event there next weekend. Come on up and we can get things tuned up.:tire::tire:

Takt 09-25-2007 02:28 PM

Shoot ... can't on Saturday. I'm scheduled to officiate football. Dang, and I need some help with getting it setup.

I'll have to work on the droop deal. Thanks for the insight!

dragracer72nova 09-25-2007 02:39 PM

Tim,
Are you going to race in the Big Mini Race next weekend?
Dave

tamiyarcracer 09-25-2007 06:27 PM

My input on the spacer issue.
I for a long timje used o-rings, what I noticed is that it was very inconsistant from shock to shock I found that the drrop would vary as much a 3mm from shock to shock, that was from o-ring age to type os material, how long it was in shock oil. and so on (I assumed)
So I went away from the o-rings and went to spacers, although a pain to adjust I found that I could be more precise, I then could set it exactly as I wanted. .1mm per corner adjustments.

With that said. the magic setting...... there is none.
I start with flat arms from side to side when unweighted (front and rear). Trying to use a straight edge to measure from arm to arm. Then I would adjust the limiting internal to the shock as I needed more or less droop for the track. One thing to keep in mind you need to keep the shocks on the corner of the car it was shimmed for. once I got the car where I liked it I noticed every corner had different spacing. But the good news once it is set up the first time you remove equal amounts from each side.

The other thing that this did was to adjust the droop to the weight in the chassis. What I mean is use the droop to correct the tweak. So for instance when I lift the front of the car I would make sure the tires came of the ground at the same time. I would balance the rear spring to keep the car flat and maintain the front droop equally. And doing the same for the rear as well.

It seems to make the car more consistant.

I know ramble ramble ramble. (sorry)

Takt 09-25-2007 07:11 PM


Originally Posted by dragracer72nova (Post 3705862)
Tim,
Are you going to race in the Big Mini Race next weekend?
Dave

Yes, going to the Mayhem. Really looking forward to it. Racing your old car (I think). Any suggestions with it? Shocks are from an 04M I bought then realized that one series doesn't allow them, so Scott traded me.

Tamiyaracer - you have me confused on how to setup the droop with the spacers. The way I read it, you set up the shocks, then make minor adjustments in droop ... but without taking apart the shocks again, how do you make the minor adjustments? How do you "tweak" the droop to fix the tweak? I don't understand.

andrewdoherty 09-25-2007 07:27 PM

setting tweak on a mini!?!:eek::weird::weird::weird:

tamiyarcracer 09-25-2007 07:30 PM


Originally Posted by Takt (Post 3706719)
Tamiyaracer - you have me confused on how to setup the droop with the spacers. The way I read it, you set up the shocks, then make minor adjustments in droop ... but without taking apart the shocks again, how do you make the minor adjustments? How do you "tweak" the droop to fix the tweak? I don't understand.

Well you have to rebuild the shock every time you adjust droop.

As for tweak:
it is hard to type easy to show.

But in a touing car what I find is that even though you measure your droop and set it exactly you will find if you lift the front slowly you will not get the front tires to lift off of the table at the same time (usually) When you set the droop to the table (Dave Jun method) or you measure from the bottom of the chassis, I always continued to have problems and what I notice (with some help) was that if a car is balanced and weighted properly it will raise of the table squarely. meaning the tires come off exactly at the same time. in a mini that is very difficult. remember it is a molded chassis.
what I also notice if you raise the fron you might notice the rear sink as the weight transfers, you might also notice that the car will also sink further in one real corner than the other. adjust the springs so the rear of the car stays flat, then the front stil won't come off at the same time unless you space each shock indivudually. I know it is confusing, and I wish I could show youin person, maybe I will get a video camera some day and I can show that way.

But what I'm trying to comunicate is as weight transfers in the molded car it doesn't really work well if everything is set the same. the molded chassis is not square. I use the smae method on a TA05 when I have a chassis that is warped, and noticed a night and day difference in performance, cause the car acts square to the track, not to a set up board.

rccardr 09-26-2007 03:29 AM

You can also set tweak using the external spring preload spacer (or ring on a TRF shock):
* Take out the motor and remove the pinion, then reinstall the motor (you need the motor in the car so it is in 'on track' condition). You also need the battery in the car.
* Put the car on a truly flat surface (plate glass or setup board)
* Put a nickel slightly toward the front on the top of each front wheel and slowly lift the front of the chassis at the centerpoint (where the two chassis halves come together) with an X-Acto knife.
* The nickels should both roll foward at the same time. If not, add a thin spacer (or move the ring downward slightly) on the rear wheel OPPOSITE the front wheel that needs to roll sooner. NOTE: This will only work if you have some diff action. Those who run with a spool type front end need to figure out some other way to do this.
* Once you have the fronts rolling forward at the same time, do the same for the back wheels.


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