I believe the RR10 bomber kit comes with shock pistons that are 2 piece and can vary resistance on compression vs rebound by uncovering and covering holes in the piston.
I would agree, for the same reasonI would think TT's would run a small amount of anti squat so that under acceleration in the whoops the suspension would be able to work. Watching some videos of them and the amount of weight transfer they do during acceleration, I think that is the case.
I don't know what the numbers are for the stock settings, but it would seem on the high side. I did try the reduced anti-squat settings on my score for a bit before I converted it to irs, but I didn't like the side effects of less traction and more 'fishtailing'.So what do you think the Yeti has, too much anti squat (>100%)?
Looks like Traxxas has updated their site to Mid-April for availability.
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"
One idea I just thought of is to do something similar to the MIP bypass1 shocks (currently discontinued) where there is a valve that blocks some of the holes on the piston and moves more or less depending on how fast the compression/rebound is. On one shock the valve could be under the piston, and on the other it could be above the piston, essentially making one able to be tuned for rebound and the other for compression using different thicknesses of valves.
http://www.miponline.com/store/media/myinstruct/mip-inst-01-496_p1.jpg