Go Back  R/C Tech Forums > General Forums > Electric Off-Road
Team Associated B4.2 Thread >

Team Associated B4.2 Thread

Community
Wiki Posts
Search
Like Tree4Likes

Team Associated B4.2 Thread

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 06-03-2013 | 11:53 PM
  #5851  
elex300's Avatar
Tech Elite
iTrader: (111)
 
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 4,622
From: Florida
Default

Originally Posted by BLKXJ96
I have been running my B4.1/2 three days a week for about the past four weeks at the local track. I have ask all the fast guys about their set up as far as tires and shock oil and pistons and foams and battery position. I have come to the conclusion that not everyone's setup will work for me, even with their best efforts to try to help. In the last week I stopped banking on what works for everyone else, and started to learn what works for me and my driving style by trial and error. Granted i'm not running the same springs or times as the fast guys but I shaved about two seconds off of "my" lap times in a week.

I appreciate everyone's help at the track greatly, but I feel I used their info to help me learn more about my car and how to tune it in the right direction.
Jeff, You are on your way to becoming one of the fast guys at your track. You have to learn on your own what works for you and your driving style. I quit copying pro setups a while ago and am so glad I did. I can dial my car in much faster now that i quit relying on them. Not saying im Yoda but im alot faster then I was 1 year ago.
elex300 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 12:29 AM
  #5852  
Wild Cherry's Avatar
Tech Legend
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 22,595
From: TRCR Modified Driver
Default

BLKX

Asked those same fast guys that tried to help you test drive your ride .

Also ask if you could try theirs for a few laps ...

Perhaps the best way to learn how their set-up drives & feels ....



My own opinion is there is no such thing as a particular driving style .

Give any good driver a bad car & it will show & slow him down ...

Giving a inexperience driver a good car allows them to learn easier & become faster sooner ...

nothing wrong with trying different adjustments & tuning , its part of the fun .

Still advise you or any newer driver to use the Factory set-ups as their base set-up. Helps get a good driving car sooner...
Wild Cherry is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 02:10 AM
  #5853  
Tech Regular
 
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 367
Default

in the b44 thread they recommended using the losi bleeder washer set insted of the o-ring:
http://www.amainhobbies.com/product_...t-4-TLR-22-22T

is it needed un the b4 as well?


what do you brake in the car? (so i can buy now and not get stuck)
ebay007 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 03:29 AM
  #5854  
Tech Regular
 
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 398
From: Hamburg
Default

Originally Posted by Wild Cherry
BLKX

Asked those same fast guys that tried to help you test drive your ride .

Also ask if you could try theirs for a few laps ...

Perhaps the best way to learn how their set-up drives & feels ....



My own opinion is there is no such thing as a particular driving style .

Give any good driver a bad car & it will show & slow him down ...

Giving a inexperience driver a good car allows them to learn easier & become faster sooner ...

nothing wrong with trying different adjustments & tuning , its part of the fun .

Still advise you or any newer driver to use the Factory set-ups as their base set-up. Helps get a good driving car sooner...
basically i agree with you, but there are defenitely different driving styles. Some people like to point and shoot, others like to drift a bit and so on.

As a new driver i would first use factory or teamdriver setup and learn to drive the car. then make adjustments to learn what the teamdriver did to make the car handle that way and change it according to your particular driving style.
what really helped me is, to have no money for new tires xD if you don't have grip, you're kinda forced to learn how to setup your car and it also helps you to hit the apex, because you have no other possibilty to keep up with the fast guys.
Cody227 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:08 AM
  #5855  
Wild Cherry's Avatar
Tech Legend
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 22,595
From: TRCR Modified Driver
Default

Originally Posted by Cody227
basically i agree with you, but there are defenitely different driving styles. Some people like to point and shoot, others like to drift a bit and so on.
I can give a good driver a correctly set-up car & he will perform great .

Change the set-up to something different & not so good & that same driver will never perform well ....


Proof
No such thing as driving style , setting up a car is not like getting a hair cut ...
Wild Cherry is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:24 AM
  #5856  
bds81175's Avatar
Moderator
iTrader: (20)
 
Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 2,745
From: Litchfield, Minnesota
Default

Good grief, that's not proof. You can turn your statement around and "prove" the exact opposite as well. Neither has anything to do with the B4.2. Back on topic....
bds81175 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:37 AM
  #5857  
Wild Cherry's Avatar
Tech Legend
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 22,595
From: TRCR Modified Driver
Default

Originally Posted by bds81175
Good grief, that's not proof. You can turn your statement around and "prove" the exact opposite as well. Neither has anything to do with the B4.2. Back on topic....
Yes it proves I have a point ....

BTW Topic is about B4 setup's...

Can take any car driven by a good driver , just practice a few laps and I will perform well .

Give me a rookie's custom set-up made for his particular "style" ?
No way will I perform well if the car is bad...
Wild Cherry is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:40 AM
  #5858  
Jsaves's Avatar
Tech Addict
iTrader: (4)
 
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 520
From: Montana
Default Loose track tires

What tires are you using on a hard packed with loose dust to dirt on top out door track. I looked at the AKA, Pro Line and J concepts tires, but none look great for those conditions. Most of the tires made seem to be for hard packed and or clay tracks. I am trying to be one of the fast guys out of the box by using someone else's experiences.
Thanks and God Bless
Jsaves is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:47 AM
  #5859  
elex300's Avatar
Tech Elite
iTrader: (111)
 
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 4,622
From: Florida
Default

Originally Posted by Jsaves
What tires are you using on a hard packed with loose dust to dirt on top out door track. I looked at the AKA, Pro Line and J concepts tires, but none look great for those conditions. Most of the tires made seem to be for hard packed and or clay tracks. I am trying to be one of the fast guys out of the box by using someone else's experiences.
Thanks and God Bless
Maybe try Jc 3D's or DD's.
elex300 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 09:48 AM
  #5860  
D.Martijn's Avatar
Tech Adept
 
Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 216
From: Belgium
Default

Originally Posted by Jsaves
What tires are you using on a hard packed with loose dust to dirt on top out door track. I looked at the AKA, Pro Line and J concepts tires, but none look great for those conditions. Most of the tires made seem to be for hard packed and or clay tracks. I am trying to be one of the fast guys out of the box by using someone else's experiences.
Thanks and God Bless
My local track where I run is hard-packed dirt with a layer dust on top of it and some light loose dirt.

These are the tires I use:
Rear:
Losi Bigshot (soft compound, red)
Proline Bowtie M3
Jconcepts Goosebumps
I also tested some Jconcepts barcodes blue but haven't raced them yet.
And AKA Impact soft.

Front:
mostly Proline 8715 M3 on a narrow rim.
Jconcepts Ribs blue/green
Jconcepts barcodes blue

That's about it I think.

Goosebumps will always perform great but the tire wear isn't that good..

Hopes this helps some sort

Here is a video of my track, you might be able to use it as a refferance (it was pretty loose dirt, used Jconcepts goosebumps green and ribs blue)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...&v=WXLZYkkHO6k
D.Martijn is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 10:02 AM
  #5861  
Wattsup23's Avatar
Tech Master
iTrader: (30)
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 1,037
From: Mount Dora, FL
Default

Originally Posted by Jsaves
What tires are you using on a hard packed with loose dust to dirt on top out door track. I looked at the AKA, Pro Line and J concepts tires, but none look great for those conditions. Most of the tires made seem to be for hard packed and or clay tracks. I am trying to be one of the fast guys out of the box by using someone else's experiences.
Thanks and God Bless
Jconcpet 3D's ftw!
Wattsup23 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 10:26 AM
  #5862  
Tech Regular
 
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 398
From: Hamburg
Default

Originally Posted by Wild Cherry
I can give a good driver a correctly set-up car & he will perform great .

Change the set-up to something different & not so good & that same driver will never perform well ....


Proof
No such thing as driving style , setting up a car is not like getting a hair cut ...
Well, don't know what to say now. Bad setup is bad. Good setup is good. Any average driver will perform better with generally good setup and any average driver will perform worse with a bad setup. BUT no one who drove a car with slicks for a year and learned to adapt drifting to his driving style will drive good with a super twitchy super high grip 4wd buggy

if you drive a rookie-car it's not setup for his driving style, neither for anyone elses, it's just crap

no more food for you, mr. troll.
Cody227 is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 10:30 AM
  #5863  
Suspended
iTrader: (7)
 
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,104
From: Mother America
Default

Originally Posted by Wild Cherry
Yes it proves I have a point ....

BTW Topic is about B4 setup's...

Can take any car driven by a good driver , just practice a few laps and I will perform well .

Give me a rookie's custom set-up made for his particular "style" ?
No way will I perform well if the car is bad...
If that were true, then every pro driver would run the exact same setup as each other, at every track. While it is true that a good driver can go pretty fast with a well set up car, let them make some adjustments and watch their lap times drop. Pro drivers are good at driving, but also really good at knowing what adjustments to make to make the car handle exactly the way they want. When a pro is fighting their car, their lap times will still be fast, just inconsistent.

Cherry, have you ever travelled to a big race outside the PNW/West coast?

To the guy that found 2 seconds after a bunch of track time, unless your car had a bunch of things fundamentally wrong with it, I seriously doubt very much of that two seconds was as a result of setup changes. You are going faster because of practice. If all of your lap times are within .5 seconds of one another, then setup changes will catch a tenth here, and a tenth there. Big gains in time are from you driving better. Some of your setup changes probably helped to make the car easier to drive. You can see how right I am if you undo all the setup changes you made, and your lap times don't change much.
ifuonlyknew is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 10:31 AM
  #5864  
Wild Cherry's Avatar
Tech Legend
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 22,595
From: TRCR Modified Driver
Default

Originally Posted by Cody227
Well, don't know what to say now.
I do know what to say ...

ignore
Wild Cherry is offline  
Old 06-04-2013 | 10:40 AM
  #5865  
Wild Cherry's Avatar
Tech Legend
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 22,595
From: TRCR Modified Driver
Default

Originally Posted by ifuonlyknew
If that were true, then every pro driver would run the exact same setup as each other, at every track.

Cherry, have you ever travelled to a big race outside the PNW/West coast?
They only change the setups for the track conditions not their style ..
Compare their set-ups at the same events , not so unlike each others ...

being to
4 or 5 Roar Nats & Reedy's off-road events.......


All on west coast ....

Going with Scott Brown to your track next year ...
Wild Cherry is offline  


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

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.