Your buggy looks AWSOME :027: . How did you get the kyosho 46t plastic spur to fit ?. I was told it would not fit the mugen center diff.
You're right, the Mugen diff won't work with the Kyosho spur.
Mike made a custom diff mount that uses the Hot Bodies center diff.
It works great and mounts in the original diff mounting holes, so the chassis didn't need to be altered at all.
PS, the only thing I would alter in that setup is the motor mounted high like that... it really puts the center of gravity much higher. The motor is about a pound, much heavier than the head on a nitro. I think you will find the buggy leans a lot in corner and if it doesnt, you're losing on traction by compensating with heavier springs.
Yeah, the high-mounted motor wasn't the ideal setup. Mike wanted to mount the motor to one side of the diff and use a 4s pack on the other side. This would have made for a nice balance and everything would fit on the chassis. However, this would have required moving the center diff and machining custom center shafts which I didn't want to do. This setup works pretty well once I stiffened the rear a little to compensate for the added rear weight of the batteries.
The first race with the converted MBX-5 went well.
On the first qualifier, the car broke the 1/8 Buggy track record and TQ'ed for the main. Everyone was really impressed with the car and had a LOT of questions.
The second qualifier was not as good. I flipped the car once and it cogged so bad that it just sat there stuttering until TallyRam gave it a push to get it going again. That cost 2 spots, but luckily the 1st qualifying time was good enough to hold onto the TQ spot.
The main was interesting. I was still wondering about that cogging issue, so for the start I had someone hold the buggy up like all the nitro cars so I could spool it up. I sure would hate for the buzzer to go off and my buggy just sit there cogging while everyone piled into me. It worked great, but I got nailed in the second turn and came out in last place by the time the car was righted. I managed to work my way back up to the front with about a minute to go. I made one bobble on the last lap and got tangled up with a lapped car. That was enough for the guy behind me to get by for the win and I finished about 3 seconds behind in 2nd place. Aside from that one cogging problem, the car did great. Several of ther nitro drivers want to do the conversion too, so I plugged Rc-Monster as much as I could.
i don't know what it was either. it just cogged really bad for a few seconds. aside from that the buggy was awesome! rcaddict is a great driver and really made the buggy shine. he was out-jumping the other buggies by around 5 feet aff the triple.:018:
I am running the same motor/ESC combo as you Rcaddict (motor on the side and 5AH Li-Po on the other side). I sometimes see it stutter just a bit from a dead stop. On rare occasions it stutters enough to be annoying. Only once has it cogged really bad for me like it did for you at the track.
My Mtroniks Truck ESC was very smooth with the Neu 1512 2.5D..... for the 5 minutes it lasted. That is what prompted me to try the Mamba Max. Even with a little bit of cogging from the Max/Neu, I think it is a great combo.
I ran 13/46 in my Hyper 7. It was still plenty fast for the track, but I do have a 14T headed my way.
Congrats on the race. It sounds like the car and your driiving are to notch.
I saw the same major cogging happen on the track the last time I raced. But it had never done it before. It seems to be worse the last time and I don't know why and I haven't run it since.
Both of my cars seemed to have more problems last time out. I hope this isn't a trend because prior to this everything worked great and any cogging, etc was very minor and never an issue while racing. But now it seems it's becoming a more common occurance.
One thought I have is concerning the batteries and the ambient temp. The day I had more problems it was colder and I didn't monitor the battery temps. It's possible the batteries were not performing as well because they were cold. The same goes for nickel cells too. I don't know exactly if this was a factor but it seems logical.
So has anyone else noticed a difference running in cold weather?
I'm not sure why, but Lipo's are definitely flatter in temperatures below 55 degrees. I used to fly them in RC planes and on cold days the difference was noticable.
It's hard to say b/c I didn't take any measurements, but the power output was down by about 25%. My little 3D plane would usually hover at 1/2 throttle, but on the cold days it took between 3/4 and full throttle to keep it in a hover.
If you go to www.ezonemag.com there is a lot of info on Lipo's. They've been flying them in rc planes for close to 10 years now and have a lot of experience with the technology.
That's a light oil setup... is the track a loose surface?
As far as cold lipos go it's known that they don't like cold. Some of the older generation cells are completely worthless if they are around freezing temp. Even at "room temp" they don't perform as well as when they get warmed up a little, more like 90 or 100 degrees. THey work better the hotter they get. Nimh are the same... run them when they are a toasty 120-140 degrees for best performance. They do feel flat when cold (both types).
So in the heat of summer it's not an issue, but when it's in the 40's or 50's outside, some lipos will only crank out about half their power... the airplane guys keep them warm and even put a "blanket" around them in the plane in the winter.
Not all lipos are as sensitive to temperature, and I don't know how much effect if had on my cars that day I had trouble. In the future I will warm the packs before running.
Last edited by glassdoctor; 12.06.2006 at 11:32 AM.