1/12 forum
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 3,360
From: Michigan
Keep in mind that outright straightaway speed (which you note was solved by going up a pinion) is also impacted by corner speed, so in many cases you will find that it is better to work on improving corner speed than simply gearing up, as gearing up will likely increase fade and make that increased up-front speed pointless late in the run when you are half a second slower than others... In that same vein, if you race at a track where the fast guys have a ton of fade, you can likely be really competitive if you focus on reducing fade, even if you are lacking the outright pace in the first minute...
I knew he was coming, and it was obvious he had more ponies than me in that race. Really need to get there on a practice day to play and sort things out. There's not a lot of 1/12 racing here in Michigan that I know of. This place I'm racing at is "new." It's a track that moved locations, and ran 1/12 about ten years ago, but everybody stopped for whatever reason and it became oval only. Now they're trying to drum up interest and do road coarse anything with wheels, along with oval, and carpet off-road. I know there's a carpet track in West Michigan, I hope to go there and sounds like they have some really fast guys there. There is also supposed to be some local fast dudes from here starting to show up, that will be exciting to get more cars in the main.
Last edited by jbrow1; 10-20-2015 at 02:02 PM.
I keep hearing all these roll outs in the 95-105mm range and I am curious as to what motor timing you are running these roll outs with. That plays a significant role (roll if pun intended). I just mean you can't tell people the roll out if you aren't telling them the timing as well. Some run 20-30 deg and some are running 55 deg and the roll outs are significantly different.
Tech Master
iTrader: (10)
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,799
From: New Bern, N.C.
found the following on RedRC this evening. Looks very interesting.
"New from Zen Racing and made for a range of 1/12th scale pan cars is the slot pivot. Sporting the same footprint as the standard Team Associated centre pivot, it takes only seconds to install and forget about. Due to the open design the pivot ball is free to move forwards and backwards in roll, reducing the locking effect and on top of that in the event of a crash it simply resets, doing away with tweak issues."
the new center pivot ball holder from Zen Racing looks like a really nice concept. However I run a CRC car. Can someone with an AE car please provide the c/l to c/l measurement between the two screws that attach the center pivot ball holder? I'm keen to find out if the neato new Zen Racing center pivot ball holder will fit on a CRC car.
"New from Zen Racing and made for a range of 1/12th scale pan cars is the slot pivot. Sporting the same footprint as the standard Team Associated centre pivot, it takes only seconds to install and forget about. Due to the open design the pivot ball is free to move forwards and backwards in roll, reducing the locking effect and on top of that in the event of a crash it simply resets, doing away with tweak issues."
the new center pivot ball holder from Zen Racing looks like a really nice concept. However I run a CRC car. Can someone with an AE car please provide the c/l to c/l measurement between the two screws that attach the center pivot ball holder? I'm keen to find out if the neato new Zen Racing center pivot ball holder will fit on a CRC car.
found the following on RedRC this evening. Looks very interesting.
"New from Zen Racing and made for a range of 1/12th scale pan cars is the slot pivot. Sporting the same footprint as the standard Team Associated centre pivot, it takes only seconds to install and forget about. Due to the open design the pivot ball is free to move forwards and backwards in roll, reducing the locking effect and on top of that in the event of a crash it simply resets, doing away with tweak issues."
the new center pivot ball holder from Zen Racing looks like a really nice concept. However I run a CRC car. Can someone with an AE car please provide the c/l to c/l measurement between the two screws that attach the center pivot ball holder? I'm keen to find out if the neato new Zen Racing center pivot ball holder will fit on a CRC car.
"New from Zen Racing and made for a range of 1/12th scale pan cars is the slot pivot. Sporting the same footprint as the standard Team Associated centre pivot, it takes only seconds to install and forget about. Due to the open design the pivot ball is free to move forwards and backwards in roll, reducing the locking effect and on top of that in the event of a crash it simply resets, doing away with tweak issues."
the new center pivot ball holder from Zen Racing looks like a really nice concept. However I run a CRC car. Can someone with an AE car please provide the c/l to c/l measurement between the two screws that attach the center pivot ball holder? I'm keen to find out if the neato new Zen Racing center pivot ball holder will fit on a CRC car.
The new center pivot ball holder from Zen Racing looks like a really nice concept. However I run a CRC car. Can someone with an AE car please provide the c/l to c/l measurement between the two screws that attach the center pivot ball holder? I'm keen to find out if the neato new Zen Racing center pivot ball holder will fit on a CRC car.
Tech Addict
iTrader: (6)
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 594
From: Belgium
What I find interesting on the new concept is that forward force to the chassis will be transferred from the center ball to the side links.
I'm unsure if these will hold.
I guess the complete football assy would move L-R cause you have play between the screw/nut and the slothole. Tightening down fixes the assy.
What I find interesting on the new concept is that forward force to the chassis will be transferred from the center ball to the side links.
I'm unsure if these will hold.
What I find interesting on the new concept is that forward force to the chassis will be transferred from the center ball to the side links.
I'm unsure if these will hold.
The side links seem fine with thrust levels for a 13.5 motor, but for more powerful motors they might be a problem.
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 3,360
From: Michigan
I keep hearing all these roll outs in the 95-105mm range and I am curious as to what motor timing you are running these roll outs with. That plays a significant role (roll if pun intended). I just mean you can't tell people the roll out if you aren't telling them the timing as well. Some run 20-30 deg and some are running 55 deg and the roll outs are significantly different.
Tech Master
iTrader: (10)
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,799
From: New Bern, N.C.
damn. looks like the AE pivot ball holder's spacing is substantially wider than on a CRC car. If somebody from Zen is listening.....there would probably be a nice market for their new sliding pivot ball holders only with screw spacing to fit a CRC chassis plate.
Tech Fanatic
iTrader: (13)
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 933
From: Mobile, AL
The best replacement pivot that I've found for the CRC part is the delrin one that C&M Motorsports makes.
http://www.hobbytalk.com/bbs1/showpo...&postcount=482
http://www.hobbytalk.com/bbs1/showpo...&postcount=482
The best replacement pivot that I've found for the CRC part is the delrin one that C&M Motorsports makes.
http://www.hobbytalk.com/bbs1/showpo...&postcount=482
http://www.hobbytalk.com/bbs1/showpo...&postcount=482
Smaller than you might think. Of course it depends on your wheel size, but i wouldn't start any bigger than 42 mm and thats even pretty big. In mod tires are usefull 1 to 2 runs in my experience. start them larger and you will grip roll. start them too small and you will run into the rim before the 8 mins are up. If I had to say an exact number i'd go with 40.9 rears and 39.9 fronts.



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