Go Back  R/C Tech Forums > General Forums > Nitro Off-Road
Hot Bodies D815 Tessmann Worlds Edition >

Hot Bodies D815 Tessmann Worlds Edition

Community
Wiki Posts
Search
Like Tree5Likes

Hot Bodies D815 Tessmann Worlds Edition

    Hide Wikipost
Old 02-06-2017, 04:52 AM   -   Wikipost
R/C Tech ForumsThread Wiki: Hot Bodies D815 Tessmann Worlds Edition
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: My ST-RR EVO
This is some setup advice for those new to this platform and in need of setup help. After being on this thread, the D812 thread, the E817 thread and at the track, the common gripe that is frustrating to some people is that the rear end of this car is too loose, but praise it for a lot of steering. It usually starts with, "I put Ty Tessmann's 2015 DNC setup on..." Others will swear that setup is super stable and easy to drive. The better of a driver a person is, the harder it is for them to relate to a newer driver's complaint. The issue lies in the setup + the track condition + driver skill. Ty Tessmann has special skills and can successfully exploit maximum performance out of a weird handling car that lesser drivers (i.e. all the people complaining about it) cannot.

The first thing you need to do is evaluate your track. Your track is rather loose if it has independent particles of dirt sitting on top of the harder under layer that always continues to break up feeding a never ending supply of independent dirt particles back up to the surface which doesn't allow a clean racing line to form. If your track has a clean racing line it's probably medium or higher grip. This is generally speaking. Weather or watering can change the track's grip level. Concrete, astro turf, combination surfaces, grass, carpet etc I have no experience with. I'll get to clay later. Use the right tire with a compound matched to the temperature. This setup info isn't intended to get every last 1/10 second out of you and your car (because I can't do that from a keyboard), but it'll get you more satisfaction and less frustration out of your car.

If your track is of the looser variety, there is a higher probability that one of Ty's setup will seem to work better and be less tail happy. The reason is because there is a lot of body roll on the rear. You can liken this a loaded van with worn out shocks. You go into a turn and it leans a lot. On a loose track you need the lean to pressurize the outside tires down into the dirt. They will grip better. The 2015 DNC set up achieves this with light shock oil 30 front / 25 rear (car pitches forward and back and leans left and right freely, just like a loaded van with worn out shocks). Granted, shock oil is temperature dependent. If it's an 80*F+ day, this oil will feel light. The links on the towers are up quite high. The high links produce more body roll. The original D815 came with #3 rear camber plates which further causes body roll as compared to the #5 plates included with the D815 Version 2. The front link is short which resists deep roll, which under acceleration out of a turn transfers weight to the rear outside tire. The rear link is long which allows the rear to roll deeply. The rear hubs are all the way down which further causes more roll. The most critical area though, are the pills in the C and D block. 2 dots up on each means the hinge pin sits almost as low as it can go. It can only go one increment lower. The lower the hinge pins sits, the more the chassis will roll. The 124mm of rear droop allows the car to lean a lot before the droop screw stops the roll and the 2.4mm rear sway bar doesn't do much to stop all the leaning. So if you're on a loose surface, good. You'll have plenty of leaning to help force the outside rear tire down into the dirt to get traction. What happens when you're on a medium grip track and you're not super smooth on the throttle and steering input? Under ham fisted acceleration and cranking of the wheel, the weight very quickly transfers to the outside rear tire, overloads it causing loss of grip and the car spins. Coming out of a hairpin, this is probably where it'll end because you're not going very fast. If you're already up to a certain amount of speed, turning onto the straight and punch it, you'll still start to spin. If you try and correct by letting off the gas and counter-steering, the weight very quickly transfers (light shocks not damping much) to the front outside tire which bites hard (due to lots of caster and 2.2 front sway bar) and sends the light rear the other way. You correct left, you correct right. Next thing you know you're in a tank slapper situation. The light diff oil also plays a roll in this. 5k front and 2k rear gives the car a lot of steering off power. Basically the entire setup on a medium grip track will give you tons of front end steering into the corner and tons off oversteer on exit and that is what the newer drivers complain about.

What you need to do is control the amount of body roll to match your abilities and track's level of grip. Fortunately the 2015 DNC setup is a great starting point. The front end is mostly going to be fine. A 2.4mm front sway bar will make the car easier to drive though as it'll smooth out the steering. Remember I said the critical area for adjustment are the pills in the C and D block? Raise the hinge pins in them! They have a larger roll center adjustment effect than any other adjustment in the rear. Go straight to 1 dot up in the C block and 1 dot down in the D block. Don't forget to re-adjust droop and ride height. If it's an 80*F day, bump your shock oil up to at least 32.5 / 27.5 if not 35 / 30 (based on TLR oils). A 2.6 rear sway bar and lowering the rear upper link should be tried. I like thicker diffs (7k/5k/3k - Kyosho) and I feel they definitely aid in smoothness, drivability and ham fisted operation, but not everyone does. Try the first five adjustments first as they take the least amount of time to do. What you should notice now is that your D815 is smoother and easier to drive. The rear will be easier to control with the throttle. Smoothness in your driving is key to controlling how the car pitches around.

The original D815 setup at the back of the manual needs the carbon inserts in the rear arms, longer rear upper link, #5 rear camber plate and thicker diff oil. Kit shock oil is already specified at 32.5 / 27.5, but as stated above, the hotter the ambient temperature is the thicker the oil you'll need. The C and D block pill orientation (2 dots up / 1 dot up) raises the hinge pins higher than the DNC setup so you might be ok depending on how much grip your track has, but don't hesitate to change them to raise the hinge higher if the car still has squirmy handling. 2.4 mm front and 2.6 mm rear sway bars are already specified. Yes, there are still differences between the setup in this paragraph and the one above, but these changes matter the most.

The D815 Version 2 kit setup vs the DNC setup already specifies a lot of the stuff I mentioned like thicker diffs (rear is 1k thinner), carbon arm inserts, 1 dot down on D block (but C block pill hole should be raised), low link on the rear tower, #5 rear camber plate, long rear upper link, thick shock oil (40 / 35) for the temp they specify (20*C / 68*F) with their selected pistons 1.5x5 front / 1.6x5 rear and thicker sway bars. The D815V2 kit setup shouldn't need a lot of variance to get nice handling. C block pill change + rear diff oil and it should be stable and predictable.

The E817 kit setup looks mostly good, but once again the C and D block pills need the holes raised and diffs should be thicker. Make sure your shocks aren't too soft for the temperature you're driving in. Consider thicker front and rear sway bars, rear especially.

The lower grip your track is, the lower the rear inner hinge pins should be, the lighter diffs and the lighter the sway bars should be. The higher the grip, the higher the rear inner hinge pin should be, the thicker the diffs, the heavier the sway bars should be. Shock oil has to match the temperature. Do not automatically assume a loose rear end means the track is loose. Assess your dirt!

Lastly, after you get your D815 handling smoothly everything mentioned can adjusted to dial the handling in as can all the other setup parameters not mentioned. Setup can be confusing, so post any questions and I'll do my best to answer. Track types (very tight, bigger, bumpier, jump size, very high grip, layout style) can all warrant some changes.

Print Wikipost

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 01-24-2017, 07:52 PM
  #2716  
Tech Adept
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 209
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default Air Filter Brace

Does anyone use the HB Air Filter Brace on their car?. The silver brace that supports the air filter on the front end so that it doesn't sag. I believe it attaches to the Center Diff Mount, but I can't figure out how. If anyone uses it and has a picture that they can share, I'd appreciate it. Thanks in advance.
kaneye2 is offline  
Old 01-24-2017, 11:16 PM
  #2717  
Tech Master
Thread Starter
iTrader: (5)
 
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 1,876
Trader Rating: 5 (100%+)
Default

That brace was for the D812. The D815 has a thicker air filter boot so you don't have to use a brace. That was the design anyway. The center diff top plate on the D812 is drilled on the front right to accept the brace.
My ST-RR EVO is offline  
Old 01-25-2017, 04:19 PM
  #2718  
Tech Adept
iTrader: (2)
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 209
Trader Rating: 2 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by My ST-RR EVO
That brace was for the D812. The D815 has a thicker air filter boot so you don't have to use a brace. That was the design anyway. The center diff top plate on the D812 is drilled on the front right to accept the brace.
Thanks for that info. I purchased the brace because it was listed under the D815 parts. Oh well, into the trash it goes. Thanks again.
kaneye2 is offline  
Old 01-26-2017, 06:05 AM
  #2719  
Tech Apprentice
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 84
Default

Originally Posted by kaneye2
Thanks for that info. I purchased the brace because it was listed under the D815 parts. Oh well, into the trash it goes. Thanks again.
I attached a brace to my gas tank.. Problem solved!
twigstoy is offline  
Old 01-26-2017, 06:15 AM
  #2720  
Tech Apprentice
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 84
Default

I tried to edit but something happened..

Get the Losi filter kit.. It attaches to the gas tank, and works great!
twigstoy is offline  
Old 01-29-2017, 04:12 PM
  #2721  
Tech Initiate
 
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 25
Default

Hello,

Can someone help out and tell me the part number for the rear shock tower Ronnefalk ran in this picture? Is it the same geometry as HB204046 (short carbon fibre rear shock tower)?

Thank you
Attached Thumbnails Hot Bodies D815 Tessmann Worlds Edition-img_5502.jpg  
D812 is offline  
Old 01-29-2017, 06:05 PM
  #2722  
Suspended
iTrader: (-1)
 
Join Date: Oct 2016
Posts: 43
Default

I think this is the part number HBS67409 for the rear tower
HBALLDAY is offline  
Old 01-29-2017, 06:16 PM
  #2723  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (11)
 
1evo RRR Driver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 2,615
Trader Rating: 11 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by D812
Hello,

Can someone help out and tell me the part number for the rear shock tower Ronnefalk ran in this picture? Is it the same geometry as HB204046 (short carbon fibre rear shock tower)?

Thank you
I'm going to ask on His FB page, Cause if that's the same geometry it will b cheaper n easier to get, and prob more durable, I already have a fracture in my low carbon tower😔
1evo RRR Driver is offline  
Old 01-30-2017, 07:18 AM
  #2724  
Tech Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
sandy111's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 338
Trader Rating: 1 (100%+)
Default

Hi guys. Quick question. What battery is everyone using. A normal hump will not work.
sandy111 is offline  
Old 01-30-2017, 08:41 AM
  #2725  
Tech Apprentice
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 84
Default

This is what I use.. Works great.

LRP VTEC LiPo 2S 7.4V 2200mAh Receiver Hump
twigstoy is offline  
Old 01-30-2017, 10:44 AM
  #2726  
Tech Adept
iTrader: (1)
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 203
Trader Rating: 1 (100%+)
Default

I've had good luck with the Protek 2600.
SpongeX is offline  
Old 01-30-2017, 01:25 PM
  #2727  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (11)
 
1evo RRR Driver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 2,615
Trader Rating: 11 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by SpongeX
I've had good luck with the Protek 2600.
I've had good luck with the 2000
1evo RRR Driver is offline  
Old 01-31-2017, 05:43 AM
  #2728  
Tech Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
sandy111's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 338
Trader Rating: 1 (100%+)
Default

What other bodies is everyone using. Could u post pics please.
sandy111 is offline  
Old 01-31-2017, 09:40 AM
  #2729  
Tech Master
iTrader: (9)
 
rdeppen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: West Palm Bch FL
Posts: 1,028
Trader Rating: 9 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by sandy111
Hi guys. Quick question. What battery is everyone using. A normal hump will not work.
My understanding is a lot use the Losi style 2000mah pack. It fits the best. It's what I ordered for my D817
rdeppen is offline  
Old 01-31-2017, 10:17 AM
  #2730  
Tech Elite
iTrader: (11)
 
1evo RRR Driver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 2,615
Trader Rating: 11 (100%+)
Default

Originally Posted by sandy111
What other bodies is everyone using. Could u post pics please.
For some reason I can't upload my pics , But anything Kyosho fits good, I am currently running the "PL predator" Seems to free up car a Lil more than the "type R" If you lookin for more stability stick with the type r....
1evo RRR Driver is offline  


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.