T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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758.1 | Additional Info to .0 | KAOA11::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Tue Nov 08 1988 09:16 | 10 |
| I'm going to add some more to the original note here.
On further observation when running this truck,I noticed at high
speed turns that the truck understeers.I believe it is this because
in negotiating the turn the front wheels tend to slide and do a
lot of bouncing.On medium speed turns usually with no power
applied(coasting)it oversteers(too tight of a turn)and it flips.
I think I used the right terms above,correct me if I'm wrong,
I'm very new at this game.
Les Borda.
|
758.2 | Corner slower | HPSTEK::RHUFF | | Fri Nov 11 1988 09:00 | 23 |
| Dear Les,
I own a couple of Blackfoots and found that there isn't too
much you can do for turning without flipping the truck. You will
just have to slow down before cornering. I even tried lowering
the suspension for racing on smooth tracks but still found that
flipping it over was a little harder but still happens. I even
tried to make the left shock softer so that the truck would lean
to that side on cornering but it didn't make too much difference
either. I guess it's not a car and sits high for rough terrain.
You can play with truck bodies too. I have a couple different ones
and found that the heavier body worked better. The truck would
roll only once instead of 5 times with a lighter body.
So what I have done to compensate the cornering is to buy a
hot motor and therefore I make up for my slow cornering by blowing
the competition away in the straight aways. Don't race a truck
against a car unless you plan on running into the car in the beginning
and wiping him out.
Good luck,
Rodney
|
758.3 | | OHUNDO::SENECHAL | MS-DOS? | Fri Nov 11 1988 17:01 | 9 |
|
In the 1988 Annual Edition of Radio Control Car magazine there is
an article on oversteering and understeering and how to adjust a
car to cause or eliminate them. It might offer some help.
If you can't find a copy let me know and I'll try to excerpt it.
-- Don
|
758.4 | Some Tips from MRC | KAOA11::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Thu Nov 17 1988 10:59 | 20 |
| Thanks for the info guys.I phoned the boys at MRC the other day
to try to get some insight into this problem.The guy claims that
about 95% of all the Tamiya vehicles are being run on and off road
including the Blackfoot.He realizes the flipping problem is quite
common and suggests a lot of trial and error in the oil filled shock
department,softening the front stiffening the rear,trying different
oil weights.He says that brake fluid and transmission fluid are
excellent oils to use in shocks.
Another suggestion he made was to check the radio system,he says
that the Blackfoot is capable of definately turning TOO far which
results in too sharp of a turn which on asphalt causes EL-DESTRUCTO
I think one of my problems is related to this,I recently installed
a CRP heavt duty steering kit which has an extremely large servo-saver
and I used the two outside mounting holes for the steering arms.I
understand(and I could be wrong)that this results in a large change
in steering for a small change in servo movement.I wonder if moved
the sterring arms to the inside two holes if it would not change
the ratio and result in less of a change????
|
758.5 | Blackfoot Repairs | TUNER::POZZETTA | | Fri Jan 13 1989 11:18 | 28 |
|
I was given a completly assembled Blackfoot this summer and now
I'm hooked on RC. I've drove the thing so much that I think I
stripped the drive gears the last time out.
This may not be a problem for an experienced RC driver, but I'm
just a beginner and I didn't even build the thing.
I have the tools and the skill (I hope) to fix it myself, but I'm
a little short on know-how.
Can any one give me some tips, tricks, hard facts to help me through
the repair process? A few questions that come to mind are:
Where do I get parts?
How do I know what size/type gears to by?
What will I find when I pull off the gear box cover?
Will a zillion little ball bearings pour out?
Do I have to repack the box with grease? If so, what kind?
(etc)
.
.
.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Henry Pozzetta (HP)
|
758.6 | ex | MAGIC1::BEAUDET | JUNK_YARD_DOG! DTN:297-6276 | Fri Jan 13 1989 13:22 | 48 |
| Henry,
In responding to your questions, I'll have to make the following
assumptions:
1. the truck was built stock - using only kit parts
2. you probably use the truck for backyard bashing and not racing
3. you don't have assembly directions
4. you want to return the truck to stock condition
So...
Where do I get the parts? - Just about any hobby shop carries Tamiya
Blackfoot parts, it's a very popular kit. Depending upon what you
need, prices will vary. You may get away with only buying a "gear
bag" which will be <$10.00 - but should you need additional parts
you may wish to buy "trees" of parts - some of which you won't need
but will have to pay for anyway. Most good hobby shops will have
a complete parts breakdown book for your kit. Even without assembly
directions you/they will be able to identify what you need.
How do I know what size/type of gears to buy? - you can identify
what gears are required by taking the damaged ones to your hobby
shop or getting a copy of the assembly instructions and matching
the parts at the back of the manual.
What will I find when I pull off the gear box cover? Probably nothing
that will surprise (or scare you). The Blackfoot transmission is
fairly simple in stock form - grease will probably hold it together
when disassembled or it will just drop to the table in a "blob"!
Be sure to check the pinion on the motor. If it looks good, be
sure it's tight on the shaft.
Will a zillion little ball bearings pour out? No. The Blackfoot
does not come stock with a ball-diff so you'll have a 3-gear set
differential rotating on small steel shafts - again, grease will
probably hold things together.
Do I have to repack the box with grease? Yes. Some folks use
Ceramic grease, I prefer to use the Moly grease which not only
sticks forever but stands up to higher temperatures.
Then there is the question of not reassembling to stock...but that
is a whole other conversation...
Good luck! It's easier than you think!
|
758.7 | BLACKFOOT INSTRUCTIONS | MPGS::COLON | | Fri Jan 13 1989 14:13 | 16 |
|
HI HENRY,
MY NAME IS ANGEL AND I'M INTO MONSTER TRUCK ALSO. ONE
OF MY TRUCK IS A BLACKFOOT. DON'T BE AFRAID TO
DISASSEMBLE AND ASSEMBLE THE TRUCK, IT IS EASY.
SEND ME YOUR MAIL STOP AND I'LL SEND YOU A COPY OF THE
BLACKFOOT INSTRUCTION MANUAL. THAT WAY IT WILL HELP
YOU GET THE PARTS AND PUT THE REAR END TOGETHER.
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, SEND ME A MESSAGE.
ANGEL
MONSTER TRUCK MASTER
|
758.8 | Upgrades | TUNER::POZZETTA | | Fri Jan 13 1989 15:16 | 10 |
|
Thanks for the help. I'll start on the repairs after I get Angel's
assembly instructions. For now I think I'll stick with 'stock'
replacement parts. After a while I'll consider some basic upgrades
to 'performance' parts.
Any suggestions on what I should upgrade first?
HP
|
758.9 | upgrades | USCTR1::DCOLECCHI | | Fri Jan 13 1989 16:56 | 5 |
| YEA, change the rear axles. Replace them with the dog bone type.
Also replace all the nylon berrings with the ball berring type.
Den
|
758.10 | Other Upgrades? | TUNER::POZZETTA | | Tue Jan 17 1989 11:53 | 4 |
|
A previous Blackfoot note mentions shocks. Any room for improvement
their? What about tires/wheels? How about improvements in the
electronics? Motor, Servos, Battery Pack, Speed Controler?
|
758.11 | re.5 | KAOO01::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Thu Jan 19 1989 13:42 | 19 |
| Hi,got Blackfoot myself that I just started this fall and have made
lots of changes to.Adding ballbearings instead of the nylon crud
is an excellent place to start,it takes 8 5X11mm bearings and one
smaller one in the gear box(stock it has a brass bushing).Two go
into each of the front wheels,and two each into the trailing arms
in the rear where the axles go thru.
I have added Tamiya(yellow)oil filled shocks to mine(not the best,but
priced right).Also added a Trinity Monster Stock motor,have not
raced it yet so I don't know how fast it is.Just tried some new
tires from duratrax,look like tractor tires but the material is
much softer than the originals,should handle better but I can't
find out,too much damn snow.
Talk to Angel about some good stuff from JG Ltd,that you can add,I
just bought one of there heavy duty front bumpers,looks pretty good.
Angel's got some info on cheap electronic speed controls that will
do the job.
Have Fun
Les Borda.
|
758.12 | forgot one thing in re.6 | KAOO01::BORDA | No one expects the Spanish Inquisition | Thu Jan 19 1989 14:34 | 6 |
| I forgot to add one thing in re.6,I added some gold anodized Monster
Beetle rims to the Blackfoot,they look good compared to the yellow
plastic stock rims.Proline sells chrome plated rims for the BF as
well although the gold plated MB rims where a better price.
Les Borda.
|
758.13 | speed controler | DISCVR::LEE | | Wed Feb 08 1989 15:10 | 16 |
| I too have a blackfoot. You know all decked out. Frog gears bearing,
shocks, r/p servo saver,big bear tires,bumper,skid plate hurricane
motor. My problem is speed control!! I used the stock one for about
a week, and a handful of resistors. I bought a mechanical(parma)
and that lasted 2 minutes, as it burned (melted) a line off at a
time. Be handy in soldering I fixed it being less one line. After
my 4th attempt and like barely any lines I gave up. Then I bought
a FUTABA 112B. It lasted to the end of the kitchen floor!!! There
is no drag in the drive train and I don't beat it yet.
Any help will be great.
Bill
|
758.14 | Monster Beetle / Blackfoot question | NACAD::ARRIGHI | open the pod bay door, HAL. | Wed Jan 31 1990 12:56 | 13 |
| My son, with some "help" from me, is constructing a Monster Beetle,
and a question has come up concerning the differential (the same
diff used on the Blackfoot). The shafts which extend from the diff
(they're called short joint shafts, and mate with the dogbone axles)
do not extend by the same distance. One of them looks like it could
be pushed another 1/8 inch into the diff, but the gears inside prevent
that. It seems to work fine, and we've opened it up and it appears
to be assembled correctly.
Is this correct for this diff? Any BF or MB types out there that
noticed this on theirs?
Tony
|
758.15 | offset outdrive | CIRCUS::MBROWN | | Thu Feb 01 1990 02:23 | 20 |
| I think my Blackfoot had the same symptom, and it caused a problem:
The offset of the outdrive was enough to make one of the dogbones bind
at the midpoint of the rear suspension travel.
I wish I could tell you how to fix the problem easily and cheaply,
but I can't. I went the expensive route and replaced the diff &
outdrives, counter gear, dogbones, and axles with Thorp parts (#4550,
#4520, #4510, and #4511 respectively.) I was making my Blackfoot into
a racing machine and I mistrusted the Tamiya diff and dogbones even
before I notice the binding problem.
If your truck has the binding problem, you might try shimming at the
gearbox-to-frame mounting points to increase the clearance slightly
on one side.
* * * * *
Perhaps one of the moderators out there could merge this topic with
758 and 838 to produce a single "Blackfoot/Monster Beetle/Mud Blaster
note."
|
758.16 | gone to the dogs... | NACAD::ARRIGHI | open the pod bay door, HAL. | Thu Feb 01 1990 12:32 | 12 |
| re -.15
Thanks for the information. I'll have to check for binding of the
dogbones. From what I've read about the longevity of the stock
dogbones, your course of action sounds good. I had hoped to find a
cheaper way by using replacement dogbones, axles, and output shafts
without replacing the diff itself, but perhaps that is not possible.
I plan to send for a Thorp catalog, and a catalog from Tower should
be arriving soon. I'm sure it will be easy to spend more money
on this. -)
Tony
|
758.17 | Thorp upgrade | CIRCUS::MBROWN | | Fri Feb 02 1990 12:19 | 10 |
| Last time I checked, the best deal on a Thorp upgrade was from Sheldon's
Hobbies in San Jose, CA. They will sell you the Blackfoot diff, dog
bones, and hub/axle kit (Thorp #4550, #4510, and #4511 respectively)
for $59.96.
I think you are correct in thinking that parts are available to convert
the Blackfoot to "real" dogbones without replacing the diff, but I
don't know the part numbers.
--mark
|
758.18 | Thorpe is well worth it. | NOEVIL::CENTRECS2 | | Mon Feb 12 1990 16:41 | 20 |
| I got my monster beetle at the very end of last summer.
When I started i thought all that i would need was the
monster beetle kit, controller, battery charger, and a
couple of batteries. I was mistaken. Within about
fifteen times of using my truck(for fun only, no racing)
I had stripped my stock hex shafts. Instead of buying
new ones I went with the Thorpe. The total for mine was
about $65 out here in Acton, Massachusetts. It has been
a good investment. It is almost impossible to strip these
dog bones and the way i drive it, that is important. The
next thing that i got was a new motor called "monster Mash",
another good investment. It was only $36 and now i blow
away everyone who still has there stock motor. It is almost
as fast as the turbo 08. My run time has been cut by only
about four minutes with a six cell battery but it is worth
it.
-With the weather out here I havn't been able to run
it for about two months now. I am getting eager for
spring to get here.
Rob
|