hpiguy
Rock Crawler
^^Yep, same issue I had with my Revos and Baja when new. My Wraith will also do it in high gear, but I'm not willing to sacrifice crawling performance to tune it out in that one.
its mostly because people dont tune them. the rear suspension are typically way to soft from the factory, and bottom out. my yeti did this. common sense would tell ya if its flying ass high to soften the rear springs for less rebound right?
did some slow mo recording to find out the opposite. rear was fully compressing on bug jumps, boTtoming out and then donkey kicking the rear up.
Most notable for me is the subject of jumping.
Numerous threads here and elsewhere about how the yeti score and baja rey nose-dive off of jumps, and the struggles to 'fix' the suspension, with few understanding/admitting that the problem is that these trucks' trailing arm suspension is not good for jumping.
It is my impression that many bought for reasons of scale appearance, but then were disappointed that even though the score (or baja rey) looked like an SCT, it didn't jump like an SCT. :shrug:
I expect the same to happen with this truck.
yep the full size rigs shoot for 40/60 as well.
i remember a pic of one balanced on 2 jacks.
edit: found one, not the pic i remember but close enough
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but its not all about weight bias. again proper 40/60, with too soft of rear springs/oil is gonna bottom out and still donkey kick ass high.
I think being too soft sprung is a bigger factor than the weight bias.
Indeed, as with the yeti score, you can mask the problem with driving technique, which only confirms that it is that much less suited to jumping than the SCBE.The BR can jump you just need to know how to do it. My bone stock BR except for paint doesn't nose dive at all if you drive it right.
All a matter of weight bias. Trailing arm rigs are nose heavy simply by design. For a test on that BR, zip tie a battery on the spare tires. Gonna jack up the spring rate but it will fly flat. 40/60 f/r weight bias works well, in 2wd anyhow on the gas. Full size has 350lbs+ in 2 spares and every bit of 100 gas of fuel. Either Traxxas told those who got to handle it first and run it to be vague, or they are clueless as to desert performance and don't know how to evaluate it. I'm leaning towards the latter.
You have to pick your battle, similar to a supercross bike vs the stocker. To work the track its stiff, beats you to death play riding. Full sizes sc trucks will suck in the desert when compared to an unlimited suspension rig, and vice versa.These rc rigs are the same. You want to jump, double your spring rate you have up front. You'll fly flat like superman. Don't sweat the oil, won't matter. Want to blaze the whoops, put the other springs back on, you'll be changing oil and messing with shock pistons if you take it seriously. Not going to do both well. Tune for what you do the most, be it a huck fest or blazen' through the rough. UDR is 2 shocks per wheel, tune 1 for compression, the other for rebound. Oh boy, I can hardly wait for that. Still gonna be a compromise with jumping and ripping the flats.
One more thing to consider. You want to jump, light truck. You want to haul the mail, add weight to the inside of your spares so its hidden and way back, tune the shocks for the new setup and be amazed, weight is your friend.
Indeed, but your heavy friend has to sit up quite high, and won't be so popular when you head into the corners. ;-)
UDR is 2 shocks per wheel, tune 1 for compression, the other for rebound. Oh boy, I can hardly wait for that.
that is impossible. requires valves/bypasses etc.
but yes to the rest of your post. cyclon mentions this when hes tuning his tube frame TT replicas. he has two totally different suspension setups for woops vs jumping."thumbsup"
that is impossible. requires valves/bypasses etc.
but yes to the rest of your post. cyclon mentions this when hes tuning his tube frame TT replicas. he has two totally different suspension setups for woops vs jumping."thumbsup"
Not impossible, quite the contrary, you just need to think outside the box. "thumbsup"