Tamiya mini cooper
#782
Originally Posted by asw7576
I think too many o rings for suspension is not suggested, especially if you run in bumpy and dusty tracks. Why ? First of all, you reduce the volume of oil inside ( the plush feelling is gone ). Secondly, you need some droops to make the cooper stick to the ground and feeling stable during cornering. I suggest to use Tamiya shorter spring set OR simply remove the adjustable collar so the front and rear suspension could have some droops ( droop = the amount of shock collapse as soon as the tires touch the ground ).
You mean how much the shocks extend when the car is lifted. The mini has no upstops unless you put o rings on the outside of the shaft. To much up and down travel makes the mini lazy. You dont want a lazy mini
#784
Tech Adept
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 124
From: Sydney
Originally Posted by asw7576
I think too many o rings for suspension is not suggested, especially if you run in bumpy and dusty tracks. Why ? First of all, you reduce the volume of oil inside ( the plush feelling is gone ). Secondly, you need some droops to make the cooper stick to the ground and feeling stable during cornering. I suggest to use Tamiya shorter spring set OR simply remove the adjustable collar so the front and rear suspension could have some droops ( droop = the amount of shock collapse as soon as the tires touch the ground ).
For cars such as the m03 that don't have droop screws, o-rings/limiters are used to adjust droop. Droop is the distance the chassis rises before the wheels lift of the ground.
#785
Originally Posted by tomdav
You mean how much the shocks extend when the car is lifted. The mini has no upstops unless you put o rings on the outside of the shaft. To much up and down travel makes the mini lazy. You dont want a lazy mini 

Originally Posted by Phenochilus
The o-rings work for me. When you build a set of trf shocks, they supply the o-rings to fit on the shaft under the piston to limit how far the shock extends.
For cars such as the m03 that don't have droop screws, o-rings/limiters are used to adjust droop. Droop is the distance the chassis rises before the wheels lift of the ground.
For cars such as the m03 that don't have droop screws, o-rings/limiters are used to adjust droop. Droop is the distance the chassis rises before the wheels lift of the ground.

That's why I use large droop effect.
#786
Only a few things left to pick up for my new mini, and one of them is tires. Can anyone suggest a good starting point on tires for high bite carpet, with the part numbers for the Tamiya tires (TCS rules only)?
Thanks,
doug
Thanks,
doug
#789
Tech Regular
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 271
From: who cares
Originally Posted by ApexSpeed
Thank you! Which do you prefer on front or rear, or do you like either of them on all 4 corners?
#790
For high grip carpet try M-grips in front with full size (26mm) HPI blue or black sedan inserts. Cut about 3/8 inch out of the insert and glue the ends together with rubber cement or shoe goo. In back use S-grips with a Tamiya narrow 24mm black or blue insert cut down like the front insert (even 60D foam works pretty well). Try hard blue short springs up front (the newish sedan ones, not the older bright blue ones) and either red or yellow springs on the back. Think low. Very low. That should get you started.
Later
Doc
Later
Doc
#791
Originally Posted by rccardr
For high grip carpet try M-grips in front with full size (26mm) HPI blue or black sedan inserts. Cut about 3/8 inch out of the insert and glue the ends together with rubber cement or shoe goo. In back use S-grips with a Tamiya narrow 24mm black or blue insert cut down like the front insert (even 60D foam works pretty well). Try hard blue short springs up front (the newish sedan ones, not the older bright blue ones) and either red or yellow springs on the back. Think low. Very low. That should get you started.
Later
Doc
Later
Doc
Peace Aaron(W-W)



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