Quote:
Originally Posted by Dj_Sparky
How does the Twin Force handle that power? I tried once with 3s and the torque made it pretty much undrivable. Have you modded it or something?
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It was mostly onroad i drove it, due to lack of parts, this was before the re-introduction. This particular truck was bought off Ebay from Promod, Most old school MT guys will know that name. This one has a New era Long wheelbase chassis and a center diff with buggy diffs, seemed to handle the power nicely, but never pushed it. I broke the right rear housing at the knuckle and plan to get it running again. Even with a leaking diff it would slam the wheelie bar hard and run close to 45 easily.
Back to the 16018 though, I was using a eagletree 100 amp micro data logger,and logged a few 120+amp runs with around 2600watt peaks and the MGM never broke a sweat. The gearing was buggy diffs with a ofna diff (I think) a 51 tooth plastic gear, the one used by most strobe slipper setups. I was using a 19tooth Monster pinion on the motor. here is a BrianG setup showing the setup
Differential Ratio: 3.3076923076923075
Transmission Ratio: 1
Other Ratio: 1
Spur Tooth Count: 51
Pinion Tooth Count: 19
Total Voltage: 22.20
Motor KV: 1183
Tire Diameter (inches): 5.6
Tire Ballooning (inches): 0
Motor Current Draw: 0
Motor Coil Resistance: 0
Spur/Pinion Ratio: 2.68 : 1
Total Ratio: 8.87854 : 1
Tire Circumference (inches): 17.59 inches (446.86 mm)
Rollout: 1.98:1
Total Motor Speed: 26262.6 RPM
Vehicle Speed: 49.28 mph (79.16 km/h)
Effective KV Value: 1183
KT constant: 1.14 oz-in/A
Motor Torque: Amperage not specified...
Final Torque: Amperage not specified...
Final Power: Amperage not specified...
As you can see it was massively over geared and the MGM never broke a sweat, Most runs were around 5-10 minutes. I wouldn't mind running the MGM's again but the expense and the lack of U.S support make it almost not an option