CrippleCreekCrawler
Newbie
Well i've had a bunch of crap come up, and progress on the new rig has slowed to a crawl (it is a crawler though right :lmao
But at the moment i have some work that i will pretty much do anything to put off doing, so i thought i'd share how i got into the RC trucks, since its only been a hobby of mine for about 2 months now. Yes there is RS10 content coming up, but I'm prone to internet forum verbosity, so feel free to just scroll down to the pics.
So i've always been a bit of a gearhead. First job in an engine shop when i was 12, continued along those lines all through highschool, electric motor shop in college, now i'm a mechanical engineer and design airplane related stuff. I've always had a collection of projects, since the first go-cart to fourwheelers, muscle cars, mud trucks and crawlers, whatever i could get my hands on/still had room to park somewhere :roll: But after spending last year building, tracking, breaking and rebuilding my latest toy, the cold weather and price of german car parts made me start looking for a cheap way to entertain myself in the (heated) attached shop.
So rewind to last June, when i got married. I had (big surprise) a car themed wedding reception, and got to design my own grooms cake, so this was the result:
When i was searching for the truck to put on my cake i picked up several different sizes, and one that was too big ended up on a shelf in my office. It happened to be a Target special, the $25 maisto rock crawler. I came across this thing a couple months ago and thought it looked fun so i threw some batteries in it and took it for a spin. Wow! Seriously, the last RC truck i had came with a 2ft cord attached to the remote and only turned when you backed up (remember those?) so this little maisto blew me away! Being a tinkerer, i immediately decided that i could make it better somehow, so it got a fresh coat of paint, NiMH battery conversion, dual rate spring setup and the pitiful 130 motors replaced with esky 180's:
Now the truck kicked some serious ass. for several minutes... then the feeble toy grade electronics caught fire, and brought my fun to an abrupt and smelly end. I decided that there had to be a way to bring this thing back to life, so i started doing a little reading to find out what was actually inside these trucks. Really i had never even heard of tx/rx, esc, any of that junk. so i started getting an idea of what i'd need. Full set of hobby grade electronics, servo steer conversion, etc. Started to look like it may not be worth it for a $25 toy. BUT, while i was browsing around the hobby sites looking for parts, and seeing all these $300-$500 axials and other comp rigs, i happened across an RS-10.
"$150?" i thought "thats a completely justifiable amount to spend on a toy truck!"
I did some extensive research (aka watched a bunch of rs10 videos on youtube) and ordered one the next day. Soon as i put batteries in this sucker i was hooked. I picked up a second one on the cheap cause it had a fried ESC and bad servos, so that one is getting the 540 conversion and all new chassis/suspension/electronics, but the first one is kept in one piece so i have something to play with in the mean time.
So finally, here's the Cat. Bent links, HB Rovers, i had 8 ounces in the front tires, but i took it out, gonna figure an axle mount of some sort. These are a few of the rocks in my yard, we're slowly setting up a good crawl course.
Hope to get the new build going soon though! Thanks to everyone who contributes here, gotten lots of good info. Happy Crawlin'! "thumbsup"

So i've always been a bit of a gearhead. First job in an engine shop when i was 12, continued along those lines all through highschool, electric motor shop in college, now i'm a mechanical engineer and design airplane related stuff. I've always had a collection of projects, since the first go-cart to fourwheelers, muscle cars, mud trucks and crawlers, whatever i could get my hands on/still had room to park somewhere :roll: But after spending last year building, tracking, breaking and rebuilding my latest toy, the cold weather and price of german car parts made me start looking for a cheap way to entertain myself in the (heated) attached shop.
So rewind to last June, when i got married. I had (big surprise) a car themed wedding reception, and got to design my own grooms cake, so this was the result:

When i was searching for the truck to put on my cake i picked up several different sizes, and one that was too big ended up on a shelf in my office. It happened to be a Target special, the $25 maisto rock crawler. I came across this thing a couple months ago and thought it looked fun so i threw some batteries in it and took it for a spin. Wow! Seriously, the last RC truck i had came with a 2ft cord attached to the remote and only turned when you backed up (remember those?) so this little maisto blew me away! Being a tinkerer, i immediately decided that i could make it better somehow, so it got a fresh coat of paint, NiMH battery conversion, dual rate spring setup and the pitiful 130 motors replaced with esky 180's:




Now the truck kicked some serious ass. for several minutes... then the feeble toy grade electronics caught fire, and brought my fun to an abrupt and smelly end. I decided that there had to be a way to bring this thing back to life, so i started doing a little reading to find out what was actually inside these trucks. Really i had never even heard of tx/rx, esc, any of that junk. so i started getting an idea of what i'd need. Full set of hobby grade electronics, servo steer conversion, etc. Started to look like it may not be worth it for a $25 toy. BUT, while i was browsing around the hobby sites looking for parts, and seeing all these $300-$500 axials and other comp rigs, i happened across an RS-10.
"$150?" i thought "thats a completely justifiable amount to spend on a toy truck!"
I did some extensive research (aka watched a bunch of rs10 videos on youtube) and ordered one the next day. Soon as i put batteries in this sucker i was hooked. I picked up a second one on the cheap cause it had a fried ESC and bad servos, so that one is getting the 540 conversion and all new chassis/suspension/electronics, but the first one is kept in one piece so i have something to play with in the mean time.
So finally, here's the Cat. Bent links, HB Rovers, i had 8 ounces in the front tires, but i took it out, gonna figure an axle mount of some sort. These are a few of the rocks in my yard, we're slowly setting up a good crawl course.








Hope to get the new build going soon though! Thanks to everyone who contributes here, gotten lots of good info. Happy Crawlin'! "thumbsup"