Sunday at PDA

March 30, 2010 · Posted in Off Road, Racing, rcLazy.com · by mark · Comment 

Well while leader was at RHR pushing the boundaries [he means hitting the fence - Si] of off road. The rest of the Lazy team were enjoying another simply brilliant day at PDA, Bicestershire.

It was the final round of the winter championship and it brought out the big guns for the two respective titles. Staples, Truman, Rasey and Howett

We managed to avoid hearing anything about the Ozzie GP and started racing at 10 after a superb breakfast from the kitchen at PDA. Thanks Mrs T you’re the best.

Team RCLazy were gifted brand new hoodies with shiny logos and pointy hats. Good work Si, we can all carry it well now.

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Lots of antics during the day, bodyshell vandalism, MAHOOSIVE air from Howett and my 511 doing some rapid laps with some shiny new pink wheels.

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The team managed BQ for Rob in 4wd, which he converted into an excellent win after stripping 3 (yes three) spur gears in 3 races. Big thumbs up for some amazing jumping action keeping the crowd well and truly entertained. Topped only by him falling out of his chair a lot.

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Haskell Jr made B2 and was unlucky to not convert it to a win. Dodgy marshalling was a bit of a theme…

I made A8 and Staples A4. I made a 4th in one leg of the final and a 6th overall which made my day and Gray came 4th (I think) overall.

Like I said Championship day and amazingly RCLazy drivers made 3rd (Gray) and 5th (Me) overall. Big thanks to all the Truman’s (even the sleepy ones) for a great series and venue.

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Happy days, roll on the regionals.

Written by mark.

Robin Hood Raceway Club Meeting

March 29, 2010 · Posted in Off Road, Racing · by simon · 1 Comment 

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I had some business Oop North, so I planned it around a Robin Hood Raceway club meeting, run by YORCC.

The Track

RHR Panoramic

The RHR track is really quite cool.  Built on top of the site of the old Worksop club track it’s basically a lot of astroturf (of varying types) on top of a big pile of (sandy) soil crafted into a load of bumps and humps.

They designed it with permanent features, such as doubles, tabletops, bomb hole, sweeped banks, and concrete ‘apex islands’.

Hoses then create numerous tracks very easily, and means any layout is really challenging, and different every time.

Cleverly, the apexes often have a feature, such as a lump or hole close to the apex, so if you fall off line you end up falling off something, or going up something, thus slowing you down.

It’s a work of genius, if you get chance to race there do it.  If you get chance to build your own track, build it like this!

Saturday

The kindly land owner let me camp the night before, so I got down there on the Saturday do find a handful of racers doing some testing.

And they weren’t holding back I can tell you, proper car breakages were the order of the day!  Hurrah!  Snap!

I pootled around the track with the RB5, and it wasn’t too good, I think the weighting was all wrong – I realised I was running different lipos.  It needs sorting out.

So the 511 went on track instead, a good idea seeing as I was entered for 4wd for the Sunday meeting.  It was nice, until I flipped it and then it refused to go again. Seems the land owner killed it with a Fandango or something…

Actually, I think the (LRP) motor sensor board or connector or something went awry, that’ll teach me for buying second hand motors…

[Whilst testing the motor I managed to fry the spare car speedo, but don't tell anyone, I reversed-polaritised it...   Duh...  So the spare car is as usual incomplete...]

The 511 had a bit of understeer, pushing mid and exit, I tried newer front tyres but that made it snatchy and grip-rolly.  I remembered I’d not put on the shiny blue new 12 degree castor blocks, so I’ve chucked those on now, reset the end-points and I’m sure it’ll be improved.

All we need now is nice weather on the Sunday.  And a jolly good sleep, I’m a bit knackered after the 8 hour drive up here…

Evening: I’ve just spent ages looking at Hupo’s Astro Euros setup, and it’s all familiar, apart from inner top links are a lot lower than mine…  I’ll be doing that then…  I think it will reduce roll, which is good on high-grip?  Oh, and his front top links are longer, I don’t know what that means.  I might ask someone who looks clever.

Sunday

Clocks went forward…  An hour less sleep…

I was woken by the sound of the burger van sneaking around the back of the van, I’d clearly slept like a log.  I peered out of the window and there was half a field full of cars already.  Tents were flapping in the wind in attempts to be erected.

I got up and set up.  And somehow managed to miss the queues for both booking in and practice…  The car was ‘fine’.

After round 1 Moss and Yardy are topping 2 and 4wd.  Whereas I’m DQ after the first round, but hey, there’s about 7 guys below me!  Not last, hurrah!

The car went okay, I didn’t like the inner top link change I made, so I’ve put that back, and it seemed overgeared, down a couple of pinions.

I rolled a good few times and needed marshalling, I think to do okay on this track, as always, slower may be faster…  Great fun track though, hard but enjoyable, I’m loving it!

Round 2 I improved, the motor came off cooler, thankfully.  But still ended up 3 from bottom.  Fastest lap was quicker, the car was okay, needed a bit more stability, so changed the wing for Round 3.  Went down a couple more pinions.

Round 3 I had a nice run, improved by a whole lap, was only marshalled a couple of times, which is good for me, a few other mistakes, but better.  The motor came off hotter again, I think this motor is about to die…  Went back up a pinion to see what happens.  The wing improved it a lot, especially at high speed.

Round 4 was great, the car was good, the motor didn’t go soft (but still coming off at 93 degrees, seems a bit hot to me?) and I drove harder and smoother.  Improved the time again.

So I’m pleased with qualifying, it’s round by round, so I think that means best 2 rounds.  I had a 31, 31, 24, 24 so that made me, err, 32nd…  I’m not sure how all that works to be honest!  No matter, that means I’m not last, and I feel I’ve done my best.

Lots of generators here today, and the award for the quietest has to go to the Honda EX650, old but really really really quiet.  A lot quieter than the Kipor ig1000, which I thought were quiet until I heard the Honda, I nearly tripped over it before I heard it.  I’ll be ebaying of those then.  [Update: found one, £71 spares or repair, runs fine, no output...  umm...]

I always forget to say how the winners are doing, but they’re up there, winning, and I can’t work out how they are going quicker…  Well, I can, they’re just getting it done…

Finals time, 2 leg finals which was nice.  The car was fine (apart from a cracked front shock tower), the motor certainly wasn’t, it was dying rapidly, and to be honest I’m very surprised it kept going. It had no power, jumping was a nightmare, and down the straight I had a nice nap.  I came in 2nd in the end, and got a super trophy too!

The drive home (5 hours) was fine, and my general thoughts on the way were:

  • The 511 handles like a dream
  • Electronics are the devil
  • Robin Hood Raceway is just brilliant
  • The chuckle bus seems to prefer Shell fuel

Some random photos…

Written by simon.

RCLazy at the first Scalextric Invitational GP

March 19, 2010 · Posted in Racing · by mark · 1 Comment 
Si's favourite and also our 1/32 scale Lewis Hamilton

Si's favourite and also our 1/32 scale Lewis Hamilton

Whilst we were all competing for top honours at the recent PDA 2 dayer, we all got to talking about our younger days and racing those tiny Scalextric cars. So one pint led to another and the Scalextric GP was born.

Monaco, Melbourne and Abu Dhabi were mooted as venues but we thought they just didn’t have the atmosphere required for such an event.

Eventually we decided on my front room. Set in picturesque Totton on the south coast, local amenities include a fish and chip shop, chinese and Dominos. We felt these provided the best selection of catering for the event.

March 18th was chosen for no apparent reason and 7 o’clock was the time.

Leader Crabb arrived promptly with Schumacher Minispikes in a green compound. After pointing out the scale differences and lack of grip on a plastic track he put them away.

We discussed off road and racing tactics whilst waiting 45 minutes for Rob. Who in true F1 style arrived in a helicopter (Seat Leon 1.4 ) and expected a track and us ready to race. Remember this is RC Lazy?

After much Ecclestone-esque track layout discussions we decided on Dominos and a nice figure of eight layout.

The format followed strict guidelines of winner stays on, unless it was Simon and he lost, then he needed ‘practise’. So essentially Simon stays on.

Anyway we had a really great night and some night racing with all the lights off. Well once we could find the controllers in the dark and Simon stopped sitting on the track.

Overall winner was never really decided but everyone’s a winner in the RC Lazy Team.

Thanks to Dominos for providing an excellent internet based system of ordering take away food, it gave Rob something to do while me and Si built the track.

Next round, somewhere at some time in the future. If only Bernie ran such a tight ship as RCLazy…

Written by mark.

TORCH – Titchfield Off Road Car Hants

March 16, 2010 · Posted in Off Road, Racing · by simon · Comment 

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Last Sunday I popped over the other side of Southampton to TORCH – Titchfield Off Road Club Hants, a neat astro track that’s been there for years, but has been keeping itself quiet.  We drove away saying why on earth had we never been there before!

They race on a Sunday morning, and like to crack on with the racing at 9am, to get home for a nice lunch. Not such a bad thing actually, as you can then if you wish stick around for a bit of testing and then head off, making a fuller day of it if you prefer.  There are plans for some all day meetings in the near future.

The track is mature, a traditional 90s off-road track, relatively flat, a couple of humps, and lots of little bumps.

They’re working on it this year to make improvements – the only ones it really needs (in my opinion) is to make it a bit wider in places (perhaps by making it shorter) and to include more 3 dimensional features.  In the afternoon they made a start on the 3d features by adding an excellent table top.

The lap length is rather long, lots of full speed sections but the track flows well, and reward neat smooth lines.  It’s certainly not an easy track, it’s nicely challenging to get good lines.

About 18 racers turned up, split evenly between 2 and 4wd. The nice sunny day brought the track grip up, and it was sensationally grippy. It seems that Schumacher BLUE minispikes are the order of the day here, with possibly 2wd fronts on 4wd. There’s huge amounts of grip available.

There was bizarrely only two heats, and then big gaps in between them.  There could have easily been 4 heats with a couple of minutes between each one and the morning would have flowed very nicely.

They run the usual AMB timing, and have a small selection of handout transponders, if you don’t have PTs.

Ability was pretty good, everyone could get around the track, and some were obviously faster than others.  I was somewhere in the middle of the field.

I loved it.  I’ll definitely be back, it will now be my regular ‘local’ track methinks.

Written by simon.

Tamiya TRF 2wd Buggy

March 12, 2010 · Posted in News, Off Road, Tamiya · by simon · 2 Comments 
Tamiya TRF 2WD Prototype Satoshi Maezumi (Pic: Jun Watanabe)

Tamiya TRF 2WD Prototype Satoshi Maezumi (Pic: Jun Watanabe)

It’s been many years since a proper Tamiya 2wd racing buggy. And now finally there’s one on the way.

There’s a pre-production prototype being raced by TRF team drivers, and photos are slowly leaking out.

It was first spotted at the Yatabe Arena being raced by Satoshi Maezumi.  And now there’s (at least) one in the UK, it appeared at PDA piloted by Lee Martin.

Tamiya TRF 2WD Prototype Lee Martin @ PDA (Pic: Ross Whitelock)

Tamiya TRF 2WD Prototype Lee Martin @ PDA (Pic: Ross Whitelock)

(Pics of Lee’s 2wd at PDA by Ross Whitelock, click here to see full set on Ross’ site.)

So from the photos, and the gossip, what does it appear to be so far?

It’s all pretty traditional 2wd layout, rear motor affair, but we don’t expect Tamiya to reinvent the wheel, they know better than that, just improve on what already works.

The details?:

  • Moulded  tub chassis
  • Rear motor
  • Front TRF dampers behind moulded front shock tower
  • Rear TRF dampers behind moulded rear shock tower
  • Rear wishbones from 511
  • Rear hubs from 511
  • Rear driveshafts NOT from 511
  • Bearing in wheel front wheel fitment
  • Cells down centre
  • Servo in front of cells
  • 511 steering rack
  • Body clip wing mounting
  • Moulded rear motor guard
  • Slipper clutch
  • 3 gear gearbox
  • 511 type ball diff with geared pulley

It all looks very familiar, suitable for Tamiya to do a normal ‘plastic’ kit, at a cheap price, and a TRF bells and whistles carbon fibre one.

I had a quick chat with Lee, and got a few confirmations out of him, and it’s close to production and the above list is pretty accurate…

One rumour is it is to be released end of May.  There’s the Euros warm-up around then, so I guess we’ll see lots there.  I’m certainly sure we’ll get it this year though.

But, the big question, what will it be called?  211?  212?  Manta Lee?

Written by simon.

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