Tune With Camber Links
#706
Tech Addict
iTrader: (8)
Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 556
Simply put, you have steer tires and drive tires. weight bias will favor which ever one is heavier. High rear weight will promote rear traction and less steering, low rear weight will give more steering. From there its a balance depending on the driver.
Nick
Nick
#707
HAHAHA!!! I'm going to refer to all of my opponents cars as "crapwagons" now.
When I look at the SC10 RTR stock setup, it appears as though they had a setup with tons of steering, maybe something that pros could drive but the rest of us mortals would struggle with, and they simply softened the rear end up a ton as a quick fix to try to get some semblance of traction back there for the rest of us. For me, it still needed more traction in the back, but it bottomed out bad on relatively small jumps and just felt really unbalanced. Granted, the RTR tires are terrible for most tracks, too... Nothing a set of decent tires, the adjustable rear arm mounts (for cranking in some toe), balanced springs (the Swainish setup
) and a little knowledge about roll centers and setup doesn't fix. Plus, as bds said above, wheel time makes a big difference, too, probably the biggest of all.
#709
Battery forward 3oz weight under rear pad: Front-24.8oz Rear-42.2 (37F/63R)
Battery back 3oz under pad placed forward: Front-24.0oz Rear-42.3 (36F/64R)
Battery back no weight under pad forward: Front-22.1oz Rear-41.35oz (35F/65R)
#710
http://www.crapwagon.com/forums/
From what I have seen, the really good drivers want a car that I would consider to be pretty edgy. They want instant fast response. At the ripe old age of 39 with the decrease in reaction time that comes with it and with a set of Coke bottle glasses I have a harder time with an "edgy" car. If its well balanced and edgy I can make it work. I've driven cars that are set up a bit better than mine with nice balance and good traction everywhere I need it. The guy I swapped rides with during practice at that time still kicked my butt with my own car. In all we are discussing here, a major part is still wheel time. You need to be able to feel what is wrong down to minute levels that when you are a raw driver you just can't sense. That's half the fun anyway, luckily.
A good friend of mine (a former ROAR national champion in pan cars) only races foam because waaaaay back when the XX was new, he was friends with Hodapp and all those guys, and he told me he never could get used to running a car as loose as they did on dirt. His fatal flaw as an all around driver is he just drove no matter how bad or good the car was. He's a wheel man, not a chassis development guy.
#712
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 2,766
From: Houston
A good friend of mine (a former ROAR national champion in pan cars) only races foam because waaaaay back when the XX was new, he was friends with Hodapp and all those guys, and he told me he never could get used to running a car as loose as they did on dirt. His fatal flaw as an all around driver is he just drove no matter how bad or good the car was. He's a wheel man, not a chassis development guy.
I was one of the first people at the track here with a JRX2. The week I saw it I got one. Multilink rear suspension, a 20 degree front kick, and a short wheelbase. Unfortunately I bought it because it was the new big deal. I only won 1 race with it. It was a B main dirt oval race. The only dirt oval race I'd ever done. I didn't know what I was doing back then but on my limited lawn mowing budget I couldn't afford to do too much anyways. I still have a JRX today. 2 actually and enough spares to build at least another. Still got an RC10 too. I could probably build 2 of them. Until a year ago my NEW car was a XX! My current race car I'm playing with is a mid motor XXX. We run on hard, sometimes loose clay. I'd rather race on the old loamy soft rough dirt tracks of the old days. Our cars ran about 20 mph and it was more fun than anything today. I miss those days.
#713
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 2,766
From: Houston
#714
I started with the Hornet (certainly not a race car by any stretch) but quickly progressed to a gold pan RC10. Eventually the gold pan changed to a ridiculously thin red Hot Trick chassis that was alarmingly flexible. At that point, I still had the stock aluminum nose but added the wide Andy's front arms soon after. Eventually the Hot Trick chassis was replaced with an absolute hot rod foam filled carbon fiber monster with an integrated nose kick in the front. At one point, I ran MIP rear trailing arms. Simple design but extremely prone to bending dog bones. Handled well in the rough but like crap on the smooth fast parts of the track. I remember wandering into the hobby shop and just looking at the wall of parts to see if there were any silver bullets I could stick on that car. That was a fun time, Fred. I was good back then too. Makes my bottom of the pack finishes now even more humbling.
#717
Tech Adept
iTrader: (2)
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 141
From: penscola, fl
I've moved the placement of the esc and reciever several times now. When I ran a full lipo I had both of them sitting in the middle just in front of the battery. So with the shorty I thought I would run it down the center just to try something different but moved the esc and reciever back into the battery compartment on either side of the battery. That was just too much, because I had way to much rear traction and the car would not turn. I have moved them back closer to the center and I might move them forward a bit.
#718
From my experience of moving the battery forward it I have made to observations-
1- it definitely makes a difference on the steering.
2- Adding 3 oz under the battery foam placed to the rear only compensated for the 'loss' of moving the battery forward. In other words the rear was the same on the scales but the front gained some.
Something I'm uncertain about is the loose off-power problem I'm fighting. It really became obvious after moving the battery forward. Tomorrow I'll hit the track with no weight and battery all the way to the rear. If time allows here at work I'm putting together about 2 oz of weight to place behind the battery that keeps the battery as close to the rear as possible.
Fred, it's nice to see there are still some people out there that like to analyze & try things on their own. People will ridicule you until they see you are onto something. Then they will attract to you like a bum on a free sandwich. Guess it's true people are a lot like sheep.
....now where did I put that 'kit setup sheet'?
1- it definitely makes a difference on the steering.
2- Adding 3 oz under the battery foam placed to the rear only compensated for the 'loss' of moving the battery forward. In other words the rear was the same on the scales but the front gained some.
Something I'm uncertain about is the loose off-power problem I'm fighting. It really became obvious after moving the battery forward. Tomorrow I'll hit the track with no weight and battery all the way to the rear. If time allows here at work I'm putting together about 2 oz of weight to place behind the battery that keeps the battery as close to the rear as possible.
Fred, it's nice to see there are still some people out there that like to analyze & try things on their own. People will ridicule you until they see you are onto something. Then they will attract to you like a bum on a free sandwich. Guess it's true people are a lot like sheep.
....now where did I put that 'kit setup sheet'?
#719
That was my first car too, I started racing in 1990.
I too miss fluff tracks.
Joe@South West Tour posted the 1992 IFMAR 12th scale worlds from Detroit a couple of days back. A user commented that the cars handled poorly and if they tried to run the worlds on a 'green' track like they did then, there would be a riot. Can you imagine a world class race on a track like Detroit today?
I'd rather race on the old loamy soft rough dirt tracks of the old days. Our cars ran about 20 mph and it was more fun than anything today. I miss those days.
| + YouTube Video | |
Joe@South West Tour posted the 1992 IFMAR 12th scale worlds from Detroit a couple of days back. A user commented that the cars handled poorly and if they tried to run the worlds on a 'green' track like they did then, there would be a riot. Can you imagine a world class race on a track like Detroit today?
#720
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 2,766
From: Houston
My standard car setup was very simple. Run the bottom of the shocks all the way out on the arms, the tops all the way in on the shock towers. We didn't have adjustments to the location of the outer camber links so the key was to run the inside end as far in as possible. On the RC10 that was only 1 spot. Everyone ran the same thing. Get the car as light as you can. Gear it so you can finish the race. Springs were whatever came with the car. Basically the only things that were ever changed were tires and shock oil. Different motors, batteries, and brushes were tried too. That's it. I'm pretty sure they handled like crap. Fortunately everyone else's cars did too!



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