Posted 19 April 2010 - 04:26 PM
Here are the details for the next Open Day:
Date: Saturday, May 1, 2010
Times: Track opens at noon, closes at 7:00pm sharp (not like last time!)
Please let me know by PM or email whether you can make it or not, to facilitate catering.
Sodas and snacks will be provided, and we will take up a collection for pizza so Bryan does not have to buy it all. If you want something stronger to drink, please bring it yourself.
It would help to bring a folding table and chair too, as pit space is limited.
We will run whatever you bring, but will make sure to run some heat races for the following:
* GT and Group C cars - the Slot.it McLarens and Ferrari F40s, all the Slot.it Group C cars and whatever other NSR or other make stuff you have that fits this description.
* Open sports cars - the Slot.it Ferrari 312, Alfa T33/3, Fly Porsches and Chevrons, stuff like that.
* The Team BURT (Butt-Ugly Racing Team) race trucks will hopefully be available so we can run an IROC-style truck race.
* Tony Kuljis from Fantasy World has sent 3 Racer Ferrari 250LM cars to Barney for us to run, so we can run some IROC heats with them too.
* Whatever scratchbuilt cars are available on the day.
Basic rules for all these cars:
Tires: Silicones or urethanes (like Ortmanns) work best.
Weight: As you feel necessary.
Motors: for the plastic cars, please stick with the motors issued in the cars.
For the scratchbuilt cars, I think sensible tire sizes will be 5/8" minimum at the front and 3/4" minimum at the rear. No width limits on the individual tires, but the whole car may not be wider than 2.5" Clearances should be .015" minimum at the front and .045" minimum at the rear, including under the gear. When it comes to motors, too much power is just an embarrassment with silicone or urethane tires, so here is what I would suggest, after testing in my Shadow with both Ortmanns and with Super Tires silicones:
* TSR D3/Falcon 7: Way too much for these tires!
* Slick 7 Mini-brute/Falcon 2: A little too much power to be nicely driveable, but not completely overboard
* TSRF motor - more controllable than the S7/F2, quite nice in a heaver car, and they don't seem to worry too much about rotation direction for use in an anglewinder.
* Slot.it motors: I have run the Orange (23krpm) and Yellow (26krpm) endbell motors and they are both nice. There is also a Red endbell (29krpm) which I will try soon, it should also be good. I have not tried the Slot.it Flat-6 motors or the Boxer motor yet, but if you like lots of torque, then these might work, and they have mounting screw holes like the TSR/Falcon motors.
* NSR Shark (30krpm) this works nicely too, similar to the SLot.it motors.
* ProSlot motors: I tried the 4001, it is in the same class as the S7/F2, a little too much. I have run the 4000 version and it is nice for these cars. The chinese armatures seem to last in these cars too, probably because they are geared short and the cars are light.
* Professor Motor Fox 3: This works nicely, perhaps a little underpowered, but very controllable and smooth. Being a Mabuchi FK130 motor, it has the same mounting holes as the TSR/F7/S7 motors.
* Ninco motors: I have used mostly the NC5, which is OK in a plastic car but won't cut it in a brass car, I don't think.
For gearing, start around 3.5:1, a little less for the torquey motors, a little more for the high revvers.
As far as frames go, let's leave it completely open at this point, so if you want to run an inline, or an anglewinder, or a TSRF frame or even a JK Cheetah 11, if it will fit inside 2.5" width and have everything under the body, you can run it. I would like to see if anyone could get a Cheetah 11 to run on silicone tires though!
For bodies, let's use whatever 1/32 vacforms we can find for starters, but try to stay away from the "Eurosport"-style things with molded-in spoilers and side dams. If anyone needs bodies desperately, I have a small stash of suitable stuff, and Barney is going to bring in a selection from Betta in the UK too.
And since all this is really just for fun, please let me know if you have any other ideas or suggestions.
Dennis Samson--------------------------
Scratchbuilding is life
Life is scratchbuilt
Samson Classics