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Been a minute since I updated. Busy weekend. Did that canvas and foil tape crawler course I found online, came out awesome. Installed the HR shock set, with the soft springs for a droop setup, and I love those. Also ditched the bumpers, flares, and rockers for clearance. And reset my steering endpints, which were WAY off. About to print new high clearance bumpers, working on wheels now. This thing is very capable now.
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That shock looks TINY! You guys are making my willpower to hold off buying anymore RC's fail me.Been a minute since I updated. Busy weekend. Did that canvas and foil tape crawler course I found online, came out awesome. Installed the HR shock set, with the soft springs for a droop setup, and I love those. Also ditched the bumpers, flares, and rockers for clearance. And reset my steering endpints, which were WAY off. About to print new high clearance bumpers, working on wheels now. This thing is very capable now.
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Just my opinion here man:Do those shocks hold oil? I don't see any issue with the stock shocks; they just need a softer spring. The added weight from aluminum vs plastic is an obvious benefit of a few grams??
Removing the bumpers helped a lot, the front needs something to keep obstacles from crashing into the servo arm though. With the rear bumper gone, the spare tire is now the hang up.
This little scx30 is fun.
I use a drop of sewing machine or gun oil in my mini crawler shocks, not so much for dampening, but to help keep them smooth so the shaft doesn't bind.That shock looks TINY! You guys are making my willpower to hold off buying anymore RC's fail me.
Just my opinion here man:
I don't even use oil in my 24's. You technically would need to scale down the viscosity of the 1:1 to match the scale of the RC. And since the SCX24's weight is nowhere near as heavy as a real truck scaled down to 1/24, the viscosity would have to be even thinner yet. The actual viscosity needed would be somewhere between ambient air and rubbing alcohol, and likely much closer to air. With the SCX30, this would be next to impossible to find something with the right viscosity AND stays in the shock.
And besides that, fluid in shocks is meant to dampen the suspension travel, to keep it from bouncing like a rubber ball. If these little trucks ran 15 to 20 mph, I could maybe see trying to dampen the suspension slightly. But on a rock crawler moving in slow motion, there is zero benefit of adding oil, and in fact, it will likely make things worse.
Seriously, I'd like to see somebody prove this wrong. Because I just can't see this any other way. Maybe there is something I am missing, but I am 99% certain there is no need to use oil in these tiny trucks.
I agree, I just use a dab of grease and it still seeps out!That shock looks TINY! You guys are making my willpower to hold off buying anymore RC's fail me.
Just my opinion here man:
I don't even use oil in my 24's. You technically would need to scale down the viscosity of the 1:1 to match the scale of the RC. And since the SCX24's weight is nowhere near as heavy as a real truck scaled down to 1/24, the viscosity would have to be even thinner yet. The actual viscosity needed would be somewhere between ambient air and rubbing alcohol, and likely much closer to air. With the SCX30, this would be next to impossible to find something with the right viscosity AND stays in the shock.
And besides that, fluid in shocks is meant to dampen the suspension travel, to keep it from bouncing like a rubber ball. If these little trucks ran 15 to 20 mph, I could maybe see trying to dampen the suspension slightly. But on a rock crawler moving in slow motion, there is zero benefit of adding oil, and in fact, it will likely make things worse.
Seriously, I'd like to see somebody prove this wrong. Because I just can't see this any other way. Maybe there is something I am missing, but I am 99% certain there is no need to use oil in these tiny trucks.
That is exactly my line of thinking. Fluid filled shocks are to smooth out the bumps when going fast enough that your suspension is going to travel beyond what the obstacle you hit that causes your suspension to compress, and to keep the tire from falling into a pothole and glide over the void. That is pointless on a crawler. And I totally agree about the droop. Drop that puppy all the way down onto the snubbersTo be fair, the spare was ditched the first night as it did nothing but hang up on everything. I'm not worried about the servo itself, as it's likely the beefiest thing in the front end. The stock shocks left a lot to be desired, for me at least. To boingy and springy for my tastes. With the heavy hard-body, my goal was to lower the ride height, and control weight shift. The HR shocks are NOT oil-filled, but rather grease damped is my guess. Keeping the weight shift from happening like a mouse trap springing, and rather having it happen slower, like a soft-close drawer seems to help so far. I've always loved a good droop setup though, it's a scaler, not a go-fast rig so I don't see the point is having sprung mass sit higher for any reason, and we are not absorbing high-speed impacts. BUT, as always, I could be wrong.
Great vid! I am 95% in agreement with you. However, just playing devil's advocate, you can "slightly" alter or tune a bad spring rate choice with damping. Beyond that, in the mini-micro crawling and scaling world, oil-filled is just a sales buzz word. Bigger rigs I think do benefit somewhat, to what extent, I don't know. As I always tell people; "I'm smart enough to point out the issue, but I'm not always smart enough to solve it."That is exactly my line of thinking. Fluid filled shocks are to smooth out the bumps when going fast enough that your suspension is going to travel beyond what the obstacle you hit that causes your suspension to compress, and to keep the tire from falling into a pothole and glide over the void. That is pointless on a crawler. And I totally agree about the droop. Drop that puppy all the way down onto the snubbers
This is the way I.like the suspension to work, particularly the way it moves between 1:25 and 1:35 in this.
Yeah, you can, if you can find shock oil thin enough that won't leak out. But I guess you could always stay with a thicker fluid and just remove enough of your piston that it works. But at full droop, I just don't see the need for dampening on this small a scale.Great vid! I am 95% in agreement with you. However, just playing devil's advocate, you can "slightly" alter or tune a bad spring rate choice with damping. Beyond that, in the mini-micro crawling and scaling world, oil-filled is just a sales buzz word. Bigger rigs I think do benefit somewhat, to what extent, I don't know. As I always tell people; "I'm smart enough to point out the issue, but I'm not always smart enough to solve it."
Oh I meant in general, not just 1/30 scale. For small rigs, I'm in full agreement with you.Yeah, you can, if you can find shock oil thin enough that won't leak out. But I guess you could always stay with a thicker fluid and just remove enough of your piston that it works. But at full droop, I just don't see the need for dampening on this small a scale.
I was about to print those same bumpers but in pla. Once they look good in pla I will print in petg.So, I attempted to print some high clearance bumpers that I found files for. This is also my first foray into printing ASA. They're meh to be honest. I have a .2 nozzle on the way, should be here on Wednesday and I'll try again. May need to just do PETG, and prime and paint them instead.
PS: Any tips from our resident 3D masters is always appreciated, and I take criticism very well.
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Try a 1 layer height. It's not idea, but will at least give you better resolution in 1 axis. You may have to creste a new profile and play with your extrudion modifier a bit to dial it in.So, I attempted to print some high clearance bumpers that I found files for. This is also my first foray into printing ASA. They're meh to be honest. I have a .2 nozzle on the way, should be here on Wednesday and I'll try again. May need to just do PETG, and prime and paint them instead.
PS: Any tips from our resident 3D masters is always appreciated, and I take criticism very well.
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