Team Associated TC6 Thread
#1037
Tech Fanatic
iTrader: (1)
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 786
From: Poland, Warsaw
I apologize if this has already be addressed. What is the best way to get replacement parts for manufacturer defects? I usually get my kits from my LHS and they take care of these things, but I went online this time. I as others have a few things on my TC6 that need to be replaced. I loved my TC5 and am still excited to get the TC6 on the track.

I post pics to my USA dealer/friend
Whatever, it is still OK chassis for me. I learn how works tc5 and I will use
it for tc6
#1039
Tech Master
iTrader: (9)
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 1,343
From: Perth, Australia.
Ugh!
No thread in 31309
It really sucks ... it made me closer to bd5
Now I know why tc6 is cheap ...
Attachment 680237
AGHR!!!!!!
I can do it at home but it need 1 more hole in main chassis ....
F.....k!!!!!!!
Now I'm at beggining of build
what next is f***ed at factory???


No thread in 31309
It really sucks ... it made me closer to bd5
Now I know why tc6 is cheap ...
Attachment 680237
AGHR!!!!!!
I can do it at home but it need 1 more hole in main chassis ....
F.....k!!!!!!!
Now I'm at beggining of build
what next is f***ed at factory???

#1040
Here is a list of shared parts between the two cars. If there is something I missed, please add the part# and I will add it to the list. I did not add the hardware.
Hope this helps.
Part # Item
1401 FT Blue Titanium Turnbuckles, 1.30"/33mm
1403 FT Titanium Turnbuckle, 1.65", blue
1418 FT .825" Turnbuckles, Ver. 2
2230 Front & Rear Body Mounting Posts
31058 FT Blue Roll Bar Ballstud
31162 Axle Shim Set
31166 Diff Rebuild Kit
31169 Diff Pulley, 40T
31173 Slipper Spool Pads
31184 TC5 Cam Holder Set
31185 Diff Bearing Cam
31187 Front Belt
31188 Rear Belt
31198 Arm Mount Shim Set
31200 Wheelbase Shim Set
31205 Front Suspension Arm
31206 Rear Suspension Arm
31212 Caster Block, 4°
31214 Caster Block Bushing
31215 Steering Block Set
31218 Rear Hub, 0°
31221 Inner Hinge Pin Set
31222 Outer Hinge Pin Set
31227 CVA Rebuild Kit
31231 CVA Stub Axle
31232 CVA Bone
31233 FT Axle Crush Tube
31234 FT Clamping Wheel Hex
31237 CVA Pin Retaining Clip
31238 FT CVA Bone Blade
31249 Shock Shaft Ball Cup
31250 FT Shock Bushing
31261 FT Roll Bar, 1.25mm
31264 Anti-Roll Bar Mount
31269 FT Anti-Roll Bar Kit
31280 Ballstud, short, 5mm
31281 Ballstud, short, 8mm
31286 FT Ballstud Washer, aluminum
31400 Bearing, 5 x 8mm
31401 Bearing, 10 x 15mm
31404 Bearing, 6 x 10mm
31556 TC5 Castor Blocks, 2° (Hard)
31558 TC5 Castor Blocks, 6° (Hard)
31563 Rear Hubs, 0.5° (Hard)
31564 Rear Hubs, 1° (Hard)
3897 Pivoting Body Mounts, 8 body clips
3906 D-Drive Ring
3941 FT Green Spring, 12.0 lbs.
3942 FT Silver Spring, 14.5 lbs.
5407 Red Silicone O-Ring
6465 Shock Piston, PTFE
6475 Preload Spacers, Collars, Cups
6573 Diff Thrust Washers and Bolt
6574 Precision Diff Thrust Ball, 5/64"
6581 Carbide Diff Ball, large, 3/32"
6582 Diff Thrust Spring
8828 Anti-Roll Bar Cup Set
9180 Servo Horns, molded
************* All FT Srings Fit
************* All Caster Blocks
************* All Rear Hubs
Hope this helps.
Part # Item
1401 FT Blue Titanium Turnbuckles, 1.30"/33mm
1403 FT Titanium Turnbuckle, 1.65", blue
1418 FT .825" Turnbuckles, Ver. 2
2230 Front & Rear Body Mounting Posts
31058 FT Blue Roll Bar Ballstud
31162 Axle Shim Set
31166 Diff Rebuild Kit
31169 Diff Pulley, 40T
31173 Slipper Spool Pads
31184 TC5 Cam Holder Set
31185 Diff Bearing Cam
31187 Front Belt
31188 Rear Belt
31198 Arm Mount Shim Set
31200 Wheelbase Shim Set
31205 Front Suspension Arm
31206 Rear Suspension Arm
31212 Caster Block, 4°
31214 Caster Block Bushing
31215 Steering Block Set
31218 Rear Hub, 0°
31221 Inner Hinge Pin Set
31222 Outer Hinge Pin Set
31227 CVA Rebuild Kit
31231 CVA Stub Axle
31232 CVA Bone
31233 FT Axle Crush Tube
31234 FT Clamping Wheel Hex
31237 CVA Pin Retaining Clip
31238 FT CVA Bone Blade
31249 Shock Shaft Ball Cup
31250 FT Shock Bushing
31261 FT Roll Bar, 1.25mm
31264 Anti-Roll Bar Mount
31269 FT Anti-Roll Bar Kit
31280 Ballstud, short, 5mm
31281 Ballstud, short, 8mm
31286 FT Ballstud Washer, aluminum
31400 Bearing, 5 x 8mm
31401 Bearing, 10 x 15mm
31404 Bearing, 6 x 10mm
31556 TC5 Castor Blocks, 2° (Hard)
31558 TC5 Castor Blocks, 6° (Hard)
31563 Rear Hubs, 0.5° (Hard)
31564 Rear Hubs, 1° (Hard)
3897 Pivoting Body Mounts, 8 body clips
3906 D-Drive Ring
3941 FT Green Spring, 12.0 lbs.
3942 FT Silver Spring, 14.5 lbs.
5407 Red Silicone O-Ring
6465 Shock Piston, PTFE
6475 Preload Spacers, Collars, Cups
6573 Diff Thrust Washers and Bolt
6574 Precision Diff Thrust Ball, 5/64"
6581 Carbide Diff Ball, large, 3/32"
6582 Diff Thrust Spring
8828 Anti-Roll Bar Cup Set
9180 Servo Horns, molded
************* All FT Srings Fit
************* All Caster Blocks
************* All Rear Hubs
#1042
Wow, the quality seems pretty top notch from what I've seen here...
For TC kits to cost what they do this type of shit is absurd. Sounds like Associated needs to clean house in the quality control department and not focus so much on the quantity of kits they're getting out the door.
Let me add that over the years I have owned more Associated cars than I can count so it's not a brand flame, its fact based on observations.
I guess for a toy car that cost $400 before spending several hundred more dollars for it to become operational I may have some ridiculous expectations, like having all the hardware to put the thing together and things fitting together properly.
For TC kits to cost what they do this type of shit is absurd. Sounds like Associated needs to clean house in the quality control department and not focus so much on the quantity of kits they're getting out the door.Let me add that over the years I have owned more Associated cars than I can count so it's not a brand flame, its fact based on observations.
I guess for a toy car that cost $400 before spending several hundred more dollars for it to become operational I may have some ridiculous expectations, like having all the hardware to put the thing together and things fitting together properly.
Last edited by trerc; 12-15-2010 at 07:25 AM.
#1043
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 3,299
From: Michigan
The screws don't bother me.. Some Tamiya, Schumacher kits were the same. I actually like them that way.. If you run asphalt it'll scrape the screws first instead of the chassis. It does not affect performance or adjustability either.
I had a Tamiya kit with the wrong bulkheads in the box.. A Xray T3 11 with burred screws and one without any threads.
I believe less than a handful have reported issues... My 2 kits were flawless.
No one is perfect. But for the performance and price it can't be beat.
I had a Tamiya kit with the wrong bulkheads in the box.. A Xray T3 11 with burred screws and one without any threads.
I believe less than a handful have reported issues... My 2 kits were flawless.
No one is perfect. But for the performance and price it can't be beat.
#1047
Tech Master
iTrader: (14)
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 1,280
I have one kit left in stock. I am wondering with all these problems if i shouldn't just send it back. I don't race TC so i wouldn't have built it or even known about these problems without this forum.
HMMMM
HMMMM
Last edited by Team T2C; 12-15-2010 at 11:43 AM.
#1050
Tech Fanatic
iTrader: (13)
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 933
From: Mobile, AL
Perfect kit here.. 
As for the VCS3 shocks- they're SLIGHTLY easier to build (not that the old ones were hard..), but they didn't feel any smoother than my TC5 shocks, so I don't really consider them to be THAT big of an improvement. Associated shocks have always been easy to build and felt smooth for me, so my opinion probably won't be worth $.02..
That being said, my only real gripe about the shocks is the pistons. They didn't come on the molded tree like they used to. They were already separated, and I had to clean up the flashing on every one of them. With the older pistons, you could usually pull downward on the pistons to snap them off the tree and about 90% of the time there was no flashing (the instructions even demonstrated the proper method for doing this). It was also nice to keep the unused pistons on the tree so that you could grab the size you needed as fit, rather than dig through a pile of individual pistons to find the correct numbers. Petty gripe, but still an annoyance. Just a note to AE- don't try to fix what never was broken.

As for the VCS3 shocks- they're SLIGHTLY easier to build (not that the old ones were hard..), but they didn't feel any smoother than my TC5 shocks, so I don't really consider them to be THAT big of an improvement. Associated shocks have always been easy to build and felt smooth for me, so my opinion probably won't be worth $.02..

That being said, my only real gripe about the shocks is the pistons. They didn't come on the molded tree like they used to. They were already separated, and I had to clean up the flashing on every one of them. With the older pistons, you could usually pull downward on the pistons to snap them off the tree and about 90% of the time there was no flashing (the instructions even demonstrated the proper method for doing this). It was also nice to keep the unused pistons on the tree so that you could grab the size you needed as fit, rather than dig through a pile of individual pistons to find the correct numbers. Petty gripe, but still an annoyance. Just a note to AE- don't try to fix what never was broken.



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