This one will be made to fit a Truescale T70R Lola body like this:
Posted 11 May 2020 - 08:03 PM
Specifications and design for the chassis will be almost exactly the same as this Lotus 40 car:
http://slotblog.net/...r-lotus-40-car/
The only differences will be, the front axle tube will be slightly longer, and there is less room for the .875" OD front wheels - it's really tight. So I'll take that into consideration. But it will basically be a carbon copy of the Lotus 40 chassis.
Rough trimming of the body is done for now
Paul Wolcott
Posted 12 May 2020 - 06:25 PM
i used to think that the T-70 was one of the worst-handling slotcar bodies, back in the 60's. hope that yours turns out a lot better than mine did!
Steve Lang
Posted 12 May 2020 - 07:19 PM
Joe "Noose" Neumeister
Sometimes known as a serial despoiler of the clear purity of virgin Lexan bodies. Lexan is my canvas!
Noose Custom Painting - Since 1967
Chairman - IRRA® Body Committee - Roving IRRA® Tech Dude - "EVIL BUCKS Painter"
"Team Evil Bucks" Racer - 2016 Caribbean Retro Overall Champion
The only thing bad about Retro is admitting that you remember doing it originally.
Posted 13 May 2020 - 09:04 AM
Anthony 'Tonyp' Przybylowicz
5/28/50-12/20/21
Requiescat in Pace
Posted 13 May 2020 - 11:30 AM
Posted 13 May 2020 - 11:38 AM
Anthony 'Tonyp' Przybylowicz
5/28/50-12/20/21
Requiescat in Pace
Posted 13 May 2020 - 11:55 AM
I noticed the same, that grids soon became all Ti-22's. My idealistic mind was filled with visions of a good mix of old USRRC and Can-Am cars though. I was running the retro program at DSC and decided to make some changes before the next series began. I announced that spoilers on TI-22's would be limited to 1/4" while leaving all other bodies to use 1/2" spoilers. You'd have thought I said I was gonna shot their grandmas! The track owner told me the majority of racers were very upset with this and wouldn't race. I became so disillusioned(and disappointed in their selfish shortsightedness) that I quit slot racing for over a year.
Posted 13 May 2020 - 12:15 PM
Anthony 'Tonyp' Przybylowicz
5/28/50-12/20/21
Requiescat in Pace
Posted 13 May 2020 - 12:58 PM
In the interest of diversity the "Doghouse Raceway" simply banned all Ti-22's.
Don
Don Weaver
A slot car racer who never grew up!
The supply of government exceeds demand.
L.H. Lapham
If the brain-eating amoeba invades Washington
it will starve to death...
Posted 13 May 2020 - 02:04 PM
While we are "banning" bodies shall we include the Lola Coupe from the GTC class?
Every class I have run either 1) develops a preference for one body (Parma Intrepid in early GTP, O/S Matra in mid 70's GP 7) OR 2) becomes an open season for mold makers to develop the next trick body.
Given the stated goal of retro to have a stable rule base and a consistent performance standard (equal motors, approved bodies, minimum weight) this situation is the logical outcome especially after ten years of experimentation.
Personally I prefer the current state of affairs to a box in the corner of "it was competitive last month, now it's a back marker".
Posted 13 May 2020 - 02:21 PM
And it's interesting to note that most recently approved bodies have no advantage over ones that have been in use for a few years. IMO, that says a lot about the approval process. The last paradigm shift was the F1 bodies with "tea tray" rear decks. Other than that, it's been very stable.
But...enough thread drift...sorry Pablo!
Posted 13 May 2020 - 05:22 PM
No need to be sorry, it's all relevant
When I built the previous (sistership) chassis, I noticed the rails had been moving around a little in the middle with the application of heat. This time, I'm going to prevent that by adding a temp crosspiece, to be removed later. Each rail I add will be tack nailed down. I used tubing, it solders quicker with less heat and it's easier to slice off when the time comes
Paul Wolcott
Posted 13 May 2020 - 07:47 PM
I used tubing, it solders quicker with less heat and it's easier to slice off when the time comes
Good idea!
Don Weaver
A slot car racer who never grew up!
The supply of government exceeds demand.
L.H. Lapham
If the brain-eating amoeba invades Washington
it will starve to death...
Posted 14 May 2020 - 06:34 PM
All five rails in place, forward cross tube done, all joints finalized. Now the temp anti-spreader gizmo gets sliced n diced off
Bits removed and rail surfaces cleaned up with Soder-Wick; ready for the hinge assembly
Paul Wolcott
Posted 15 May 2020 - 07:26 PM
Glad to help!
Mike Katz
Scratchbuilts forever!!
Posted 18 May 2020 - 11:21 PM
After 8 hours of tumbling, my drop arm wiggle management actually improved. I wish you could feel it. It lifts about 15 thou, droops and wiggles a couple thou. Unhindered and smooth. If there is drop arm nirvana, this is it
Lola chassis is done
Paul Wolcott
Posted 19 May 2020 - 10:46 AM
Pablo, do you use K&S brass rod or is there another source you prefer?
Posted 19 May 2020 - 04:26 PM
I've always used K & S. The brass rod, tube, and sheet has always been fine for me. For 1/16 rod, I like the three 12" lengths in packs, part # 8162. I don't even test it, it's always straight.
K & S music wire the last couple years has been hit or miss in straightness. Some of it is really bad. I contacted the company, they denied the problem exists and claim it's straight when it leaves the factory. Baloney. Some builders don't mind if it's wavy. I do.
I still like my method of using dressmaker (thin) pins for the first hole punches. Then I examine the alignment, and if it needs a little movement to correct, I mark with a Sharpie. Then when I go full harpoon I bias it appropriately. In this case, the left side holes need to go forward just a hair.
Boy howdy the front wheel wells are going to be crowded on this Lola
Paul Wolcott