Posted 12 August 2022 - 11:45 AM
I'm pretty sure gyro effect is a thing.
I was skeptical at first, but the Eurosport guys who really jump through hoops to achieve it, are ultra serious slot racers.
There was a video of Lee Gilbert trimming down the end of an arm shaft to 1.5MM, for a 6T pinion, running the motor on a power supply and using a Dremel tool.
For him to do stuff like that, he had to be real convinced the added gyro effect aided the handling.
If it was just a matter of having instant acceleration, you could do that with arm wind and timing.
In some of the 1/32 cars, they have gone to a 1.2MM shaft so they can use a 5T pinion.
My experiences, I remember trying to use a B Production car that Manta Ray had left me, that had an 8T pinion, for an event at my raceway.
I thought it ran well until I tried someone else's car with a 7T.
It was slower on the straightaway, but probably at least .2-.3 faster around the car.
2 different cars, but it was still real convincing.
This thread jogged a wing car memory of mine, probably from about 1997 or 98.
On a lark, because Koford started selling a 7T pinion for Eurosport/scale racing, I tried one for the heck of it, with the most unlikely wind for it, a 94.5.
It had no bank speed, but it whistled around the infield, and I used that motor, parts of a couple big races I won.
A friend would ask "What's with the sound of that motor?"
I fed him some BS he never bought, and when I ran it, he would always say "You're running that Highwinder, aren't you?" Lol
The thought was to use it for a Purple, Black, Yellow, with the shorter trip to the Deadman, but a long way around the Donut.
But the car handled so well, I started using it on Red.
At a race in Alabama, I remember going into the 90,and hearing the guy next to me on White spinning his pinion in the Donut.
I had zero chance to stop and knew I was screwed.
My driver side rear, clobbered his stopped car, the spur gear lasting just long enough, that I made it back to the panel, quickly replaced it, and still won the race.
I then abandoned the 7T pinions because I was worried the more "starry" shape was at least a bit harder on the spur gear.
Back then, it never occurred to me that the reason it seemed that car couldn't be driven out of the slot, was the added gyro effect of the 7-38 gearing.
Mike Swiss
Inventor of the Low CG guide flag 4/20/18
IRRA® Components Committee Chairman
Five-time USRA National Champion (two G7, one G27, two G7 Senior)
Two-time G7 World Champion (1988, 1990), eight G7 main appearances
Eight-time G7 King track single lap world record holder
17B West Ogden Ave., Westmont, IL 60559, (708) 203-8003, mikeswiss86@hotmail.com (also my PayPal address)
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