Go Back  R/C Tech Forums > General Forums > Electric On-Road
Tamiya TT02 Thread >

Tamiya TT02 Thread

Community
Wiki Posts
Search
Like Tree1123Likes

Tamiya TT02 Thread

    Hide Wikipost
Old 01-14-2021, 03:44 PM   -   Wikipost
R/C Tech ForumsThread Wiki: Tamiya TT02 Thread
Please read: This is a community-maintained wiki post containing the most important information from this thread. You may edit the Wiki once you have been a member for 90 days and have made 90 posts.
 
Last edit by: pparrett
TT02 Wiki - Post your setups, upgrades and home grown ideas here for us to read...

TT02 vs the TT-01
http://www.thercracer.com/2013/01/ta...irst-pics.html
New flat chassis layout - Easier to run LiPOs vs the cutouts in the TT-01s
Revised suspension geometry
Support for std spur gears

MODELS ----------------------------------------------------

Changes that follow are in comparison to the basic kit.
TT02 - Base Kit. Friction Dampers.
TT02D - Drift: Drift Tires, Hardened A-Parts, Oil Shocks
TT02R - Race: Rear Alu 3* Toe In Hubs, Alu Propshaft + Cups, CVA oil Dampers
TT02RR - Race+: TT02R + Adjustable Upper Arms, Oil Filled Diffs, Hardened Blue Chassis
TT02S - Type S: TRF416 arms, FRP shock towers, bearings,
TT02SR - TypeS Race: TT02S + Double cardan front drive shafts, rear lightweight universals, Rear sealed oil differential, front spool
TT02B - Buggy. Offroad: CVA Shocks, Double Wishbone long suspension

HOP UPS ----------------------------------------------------

Bearings:
#54476 Ball Bearing Set TT02: 8x 1050, 4x 1280, 4x 1150

Propshaft:
#54501 Alum Propeller Shaft TT02
#54502 Alum Propeller Joint TT02
Tip:
Put a 3mm piece of well greased silicone hose between the dog bone and the shaft of each wheel to reduce slop.

Motor Mount and Gearing:
#54558 TT02 Aluminum Motor Mount
#54500 High Speed Gear Set
#54875 Oil Gear Differential

Steering:
#54550 Low Friction Step Screws
- Full Upgrade Kit -
#54752 Steering Upgrade Kit, Includes all below.
- Individual Parts -
#54574 Aluminum Steering Set
#54575 Aluminum Steering Bridge
#54799 Hi-Torque Servo Saver or #51000 Servo Saver Black
#54248 Aluminum Turnbuckles 3x23
#50797 5mm Short Adjustable Turnbuckle End


Dog Bones to Universal Joints:
- Standard Steel -
#53792 Universal Shaft Assembly (steel), NOTE: Must also use item 54477 on the TT-02
#54477 Gearbox Joint for Universal Shaft (steel) (2pieces)
- Lightweight -
#53506 Blue Aluminum 39mm Swing Shaft
#53499 Wheel axle for assembly universal
#53681 Titanium wheel axle for assemblu universal (but this is very expensive)
#53500 cross joints for universal
#54477 Gearbox Joint for Universal Shaft (2pieces)
Tip: Run steel in the front, Alu is okay for the rear but the front takes a lot of wear and impact from crashes

Shock Options:
#54753 Super-mini CVA Oil Shocks, comes with med black springs
#42102 TRF 55mm Shocks

Chassis:
#54639 Carbon Damper Stay Front
#54640 Carbon Damper Stay Rear
#47339 Hard Lower Deck Blue
#47340 Hard Lower Deck White
#54926 Hard Lower Deck Black
#54733 Aluminum Rear Uprights, Gives 3* rear toe in for extra stability
#54549 Aluminum Rear Uprights, 2.5* Rear Toe In
#58584 Hardened A-Parts, Uprights, Hub Carriers, Diff Covers, etc

SUGGESTED BASE SETUPS ----------------------------------

Bashing:
Build to the kit instructions and have fun!

Asphalt Parking Lot Racing:
Front Diff: 300k-500k (or Tamiya #42247 Gear differential putty)
Rear Diff: 3K oil in the rear diff for low / medium grip, 5k oil in the rear for medium / high grip

Carpet Indoor Racing:
Front Diff: 300k-500k (or Tamiya #42247 Gear differential putty)
Rear Diff: 7k -10k in the rear diff for very high grip carpet.


ADDITIONAL RESOURCES -------------------------------------

TT02 Build and Review here
http://www.thercracer.com/2013/05/ta...nd-review.html

TT02 Tuning and Mods Guide
http://www.thercracer.com/2014/08/ta...-and-tips.html
https://www.rcdriver.com/take-the-versatile-tamiya-tt-02-chassis-to-the-next-level/


Gearing for 17.5t Blinky
http://www.thercracer.com/2013/07/ho...inky-with.html











Print Wikipost

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 04-01-2019, 08:18 PM
  #1906  
Tech Adept
 
proliteandsc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2015
Location: Maiden NC
Posts: 180
Default

Originally Posted by proliteandsc


I wired it like this before the problems started. This is my other one with a different servo/reciver.
proliteandsc is offline  
Old 04-04-2019, 06:47 PM
  #1907  
Tech Rookie
 
Rayquaza's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: Sydney. AUS
Posts: 13
Default

Do you have another Spektrum or a DSM2 compatible receiver you can use other than the AVC one? I have one of those SR3100 orange receivers and had a TBLE-02S soldered directly into a Torque Tuned motor and it ran without getting hot.
Rayquaza is offline  
Old 04-04-2019, 10:30 PM
  #1908  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 2,313
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default

I hadn't considered tha the AVC reciever might actaully draw significant current...
Nerobro is offline  
Old 04-05-2019, 02:25 AM
  #1909  
Tech Rookie
 
Rayquaza's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: Sydney. AUS
Posts: 13
Default

If it's the case, it also doesn't help that the TBLE-02S has, like, no fancy features on it to protect itself from too much current besides the basic over voltage. But considering the quantity made, it wouldn't surprise me that better protection measures were cut for cost. Which is too bad. The TBLE-02 is great.
Rayquaza is offline  
Old 04-06-2019, 09:25 AM
  #1910  
Tech Adept
 
proliteandsc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2015
Location: Maiden NC
Posts: 180
Default

My friend's car has a orange reciver that I wired directly with no problems so far. I'm waiting for the LHS to get me a 2 channel spectrum reciver think it's the sr215. Personally I think that Tamiya ESC is a POS. $70 for that thing is way to much. The only reason I'm using it is because the track requires it for the class. Tamiya meeds to get out of the 1900s and put a brushless motor with a descent ESC. I don't think this one even has lipo cut off.
proliteandsc is offline  
Old 04-06-2019, 12:42 PM
  #1911  
Tech Champion
iTrader: (94)
 
Raman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 5,348
Trader Rating: 94 (100%+)
Default

It has LiFe cut off. Not many kits that are non rtr come with a n ESC or motor.. so consider it a free bee.

For a kit to include brushless price will go up a bit, so keep that in mind
eR1c likes this.
Raman is online now  
Old 04-06-2019, 06:15 PM
  #1912  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 2,313
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default

The list price for the TLBE02 is high. They're $25 on ebay.....
Nerobro is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 08:48 AM
  #1913  
Tech Adept
 
proliteandsc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2015
Location: Maiden NC
Posts: 180
Default

Originally Posted by Nerobro
The list price for the TLBE02 is high. They're $25 on ebay.....
I'm trying to get my stuff from the LHS, since they have a track for me to race on. I do get practically everthing from them, but $25 is much better then the over $70. I'm already getting another motor and reciver from them to try and fix this problem. Did anyone else have this problem with this ESC?
proliteandsc is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 01:47 PM
  #1914  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 2,313
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default

People using high power servos in euro truck, have burned out multiple TBLE-02s. So.. "yes"
Nerobro is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 02:02 PM
  #1915  
Tech Champion
iTrader: (94)
 
Raman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 5,348
Trader Rating: 94 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by Nerobro
People using high power servos in euro truck, have burned out multiple TBLE-02s. So.. "yes"
high powered servo in Euro truck? You mean a digital servo or an actually servo marked HV?
Raman is online now  
Old 04-07-2019, 02:22 PM
  #1916  
Tech Adept
 
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 110
Default

Sounds like a fairly high expenditure for an out of the box novelty class.

I run a Trackstar TS-D99X with a TBLE02 with no issue.
Bloke is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 02:27 PM
  #1917  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 2,313
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by Raman


high powered servo in Euro truck? You mean a digital servo or an actually servo marked HV?
digital doesn't mean high powered, and HV just means it accepts HV. I mean high current draw. Savox, in general seem to fall in that category. KO Propo has a speical low current servo just for classes that specify stock ESCs.
Nerobro is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 03:52 PM
  #1918  
Tech Adept
 
proliteandsc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2015
Location: Maiden NC
Posts: 180
Default

On car that smoked ESC:
Spectrum S6180
100 oz-in @ 6.0v
0.14 sec/60* @ 6.0v

On another car I have with no problems.
Spectrum S6240Rx
208 oz-in @ 6.0v
0.08 sec/60* @6.0v
proliteandsc is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 03:59 PM
  #1919  
Tech Rookie
 
Rayquaza's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: Sydney. AUS
Posts: 13
Default

Maybe purchase another S6240Rx and put it in your problem car? I have a Savox SC-0254MG which has similar speed and it works/ed fine with the TBLE02
Rayquaza is offline  
Old 04-07-2019, 04:41 PM
  #1920  
Tech Champion
iTrader: (94)
 
Raman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 5,348
Trader Rating: 94 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by Nerobro
digital doesn't mean high powered, and HV just means it accepts HV. I mean high current draw. Savox, in general seem to fall in that category. KO Propo has a speical low current servo just for classes that specify stock ESCs.
I'm aware of the difference between analog, digital, coreless, brushless servos etc.

Euro Truck is a box stock spec class, so was just trying to understand what type of servo was causing the TBLE02 S to go up in smoke in. It only has a 1.5 amp bec so the choice of a high current servo is asking for trouble...
Nerobro likes this.
Raman is online now  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.