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Yeah, they're not too hard to get sideways, good control and following a good line takes more work though. Awd and low traction make it pretty easy. I have one of those cars, TC3 specifically, and I tried it rwd before. She's tough to control at speed. The suspension is set up bad, weight distribution crappy, and I'd prefer a better(faster) steering server. I had a tough time keeping the car straight above 20mph. I've since fixed a part of the problem(a tracking issue), but to have the control with just rwd is hard. It would take some time to get decent, but it would be very very cool.
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Yeah, they're not too hard to get sideways, good control and following a good line takes more work though. Awd and low traction make it pretty easy. I have one of those cars, TC3 specifically, and I tried it rwd before. She's tough to control at speed. The suspension is set up bad, weight distribution crappy, and I'd prefer a better(faster) steering server. I had a tough time keeping the car straight above 20mph. I've since fixed a part of the problem(a tracking issue), but to have the control with just rwd is hard. It would take some time to get decent, but it would be very very cool.
Yes, it has a lot of weight on one side, but that is because of the way the motor is mounted, so it's torque will lift the chassis on one side.
RWD will never work to drift, and hardly for driving normal either... it's just not possible to keep it sideways, unless you have some unheard of gyrocontrolthingymajiggy for the car...
But yes, it would've been cool...
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Bad weight distribution -> running a 10 cell pack, hehe. I've got brushless too(Lehner Basic series), putting out around 3/4hp, fun fun. She's a touch heavy on one side with that battery pack, lol. Oh, 3/4 hp is nothing. I know another guy running a Lehner 1540 capable of about 2hp. He made a vid of him roasting his tires, smoke everywhere, fun to watch. Otherwise, my setup is crap. I've never taken the time to tune the suspension and find what spring rates/shock oil rates I should be running. I should really do something about that, lol. Yes, I've heard the stock setup is nice. However, I don't race, just bash. I went straight for the rally kit and haven't looked back. I've even jacked it up further and made a Baja truck out of it, lol, but that's a bit off the subject.
Rwd isn't the problem. It's that the car really isn't to the tolerances needed to have a controllable car. That and I'm running a stock steering servo not really capable of the precision and speeds really needed to keep the tires where I'd want them.
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Rwd isn't the problem. It's that the car really isn't to the tolerances needed to have a controllable car. That and I'm running a stock steering servo not really capable of the precision and speeds really needed to keep the tires where I'd want them.
Yes, the car might be good, but no driver can control it quickly enough. 5th Scale is actually possible to drift, since they're bigger and slower, and more stable. But give up 10th scale...
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@spinitsidewayz!: I've been racing R/C cars since I was ten years old, I've been a sponsored driver for the last few, and I've won what there is to win in Touring Modified in Norway, and also done very well at big races, even with a small budget. I know what works and what doesn't.
Drifting RWD nicely with control is yet to be seen.
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I'd agree that with the small weight and the faster changes(than a larger, heavier car, 1/5th, full scale, etc...) it gets very very difficult. Impossible, I'd say not. I'm sure that some day, there will be someone that will. I'm not that someone, lol. Also, I'm speaking about asphalt driving as well. If you were on a lower friction surface like ice or running PVC pipe over your wheels like in the vid, movements slow down and become slow enough to react to. In that type if situation, rwd may be controllable, emphasis on may be, lol.
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