Tekno RC EB48 Thread
#706
Straight cut are more durable and efficient in our opinion. Spiral is more compact, good for larger ring gear sizes (truggy ratios) perhaps to get the diff to sit as low as possible. Both obviously work, but we prefer straight cut.
#709
Cool , I was thinking that they might be a little more easier rolling/less drag than spiral cut since they mesh differently .
#710
Yeah, shouldn't be any problems there. Any available wheel for 1/8th buggy should fit. We're tested all kinds of wheels and they are all pretty standard.
#711
#713
Hallo and sory for my bad english!
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
#715
Hallo and sory for my bad english!
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
Traction hasn't really been an issue in our setup tuning. Meaning, we've almost always had enough traction. When we first starting testing the car we were having a little trouble with high speed turn-in and high-speed cornering. We had too much traction and the rear wasn't coming around how we wanted. Mind you this was during the very first test sessions. Our setups have obviously improved since then and we now have a good balance.
In any case, to get more traction with our car you would follow the same setup changes as most other cars. More toe, more anti-squat, softer spring/oil, roll center adjustments.
#718
Hallo and sory for my bad english!
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
I come from Germany and will drive the car in some national races here.
It looks so pretty and the german distribtor is very friendly!
For a long time i had driven the Durango DNX Nitro.
Now i search for a very good brushless buggy with good handling still in standard setup.
The Durango has the problem of a very light rear.
I suspect that even the Tekno has a very light rear to, so control is very difficult.
Is this correct that the rear of the car is not so stable and difficult to tune?
It is horrible for a better hobby racer when you must search many howers at the race for a setup when your car is so comlicated to tune?
Sorry for my bad english and i hope you have some feedback for me.
#719
RC Insider just posted this vid from JBRL Rnd #4 (race was a few weeks ago). This one was taken during the day so you can see the track a little better. Anyway, just something I found and thought I would post along.
http://vimeo.com/44167575
http://vimeo.com/44167575
#720
Tech Addict
iTrader: (1)
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 604
RC Insider just posted this vid from JBRL Rnd #4 (race was a few weeks ago). This one was taken during the day so you can see the track a little better. Anyway, just something I found and thought I would post along.
http://vimeo.com/44167575
http://vimeo.com/44167575
what esc motor is he using??



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