B_Honeydew
Newbie
(Moderators - feel free to move this thread to Multi-axle if you think that is more appropriate)
Hey everyone -
First real build post here. A little background...
As far as scale RC trucks and crawlers, I have built an RC4WD BeastII and modified a Barrage with servo motor drivetrain to make it crawl real slooow. This idea is a blending of those 2 ideas, in the form of a MAZ-537. So the concept is a really small (works out to about 1:43 scale, about 9 inches long), reasonably scale version of a proper ugly Russian prime mover that I think is pretty cool.
<The Build>
Since the concept is small, I started with the parts that would be hardest to build on my own - the wheels/tires and the differentials. I found a set of 39mm OD tires with somewhat scale tread/sidewall:
Those tires basically set the scale for the build, which is results in the slightly odd 1:43 scale. From there, I needed to find some small differentials. I wanted actual diffs (not spools) since this thing is an 8x8 and I wanted it to actually be able to turn. I also wanted to have the drivetrain/suspension similar to the full-scale truck, so the diffs needed to be ring and pinion style, and the suspension needed to be independent wishbones. I ended up finding what I needed in a 1/28 scale drift car from Atomic RC:
ATOMIC R/C Products Official Web Site
This stuff is tiny. After a while, you start thinking 2mm is pretty big.
Here is a pic of the ball diff:
I was really surprised at the quality of these kits, and it would have been impossible to piece together the diffs, suspension, hardware, etc for less than what I paid for these kits. Too bad I had to cut them all apart.
Once I had these basic pieces in my hands, I could measure them up and start laying things out in CAD. Turns out the suspension and diffs allowed me to keep the scale width/length very close to the actual truck - I was really surprised.
From a layout viewpoint, my MAZ is basically 2 of the Atomic RC cars, with extremely short wheelbases, joined by a central homemade transfer case, with a set of homemade final drives between the #1/#2 and #3/#4 axles.
The CAD exercise was really challenging. Although I was using small components, I was trying to fit those components into a small space. It turns out each millimeter was important. There were a lot of small tweaks to get everything to package, and when you zoomed in on CAD you thought you had lots of space when in reality you only had a millimeter or so.
Finding the right set of gears for the transfer/final drives that allowed for proper packaging of the driveshafts and the layout of the steering proved particularly difficult.
Once I was somewhat satisfied with the CAD, I sent the Cab, transfer cases, final drives and wheel covers out for 3D printing. The other parts I will make by hand. The 3D parts are back now but I save that and some other build details for another post.
Thanks for reading/watching!
Hey everyone -
First real build post here. A little background...
As far as scale RC trucks and crawlers, I have built an RC4WD BeastII and modified a Barrage with servo motor drivetrain to make it crawl real slooow. This idea is a blending of those 2 ideas, in the form of a MAZ-537. So the concept is a really small (works out to about 1:43 scale, about 9 inches long), reasonably scale version of a proper ugly Russian prime mover that I think is pretty cool.

<The Build>
Since the concept is small, I started with the parts that would be hardest to build on my own - the wheels/tires and the differentials. I found a set of 39mm OD tires with somewhat scale tread/sidewall:

Those tires basically set the scale for the build, which is results in the slightly odd 1:43 scale. From there, I needed to find some small differentials. I wanted actual diffs (not spools) since this thing is an 8x8 and I wanted it to actually be able to turn. I also wanted to have the drivetrain/suspension similar to the full-scale truck, so the diffs needed to be ring and pinion style, and the suspension needed to be independent wishbones. I ended up finding what I needed in a 1/28 scale drift car from Atomic RC:
ATOMIC R/C Products Official Web Site


This stuff is tiny. After a while, you start thinking 2mm is pretty big.
Here is a pic of the ball diff:

I was really surprised at the quality of these kits, and it would have been impossible to piece together the diffs, suspension, hardware, etc for less than what I paid for these kits. Too bad I had to cut them all apart.
Once I had these basic pieces in my hands, I could measure them up and start laying things out in CAD. Turns out the suspension and diffs allowed me to keep the scale width/length very close to the actual truck - I was really surprised.
From a layout viewpoint, my MAZ is basically 2 of the Atomic RC cars, with extremely short wheelbases, joined by a central homemade transfer case, with a set of homemade final drives between the #1/#2 and #3/#4 axles.




The CAD exercise was really challenging. Although I was using small components, I was trying to fit those components into a small space. It turns out each millimeter was important. There were a lot of small tweaks to get everything to package, and when you zoomed in on CAD you thought you had lots of space when in reality you only had a millimeter or so.
Finding the right set of gears for the transfer/final drives that allowed for proper packaging of the driveshafts and the layout of the steering proved particularly difficult.
Once I was somewhat satisfied with the CAD, I sent the Cab, transfer cases, final drives and wheel covers out for 3D printing. The other parts I will make by hand. The 3D parts are back now but I save that and some other build details for another post.
Thanks for reading/watching!