krawlfreak
I wanna be Dave
I have to say he has a very compelling argument.
So with that rational: If it didnt look like a body then it would be fine?
We are debating the rules here, so why are we going to "Forget every rule you are looking it."?
"Is the cab, by itself, a body? Answer the question as its worded. "
OK. It is not a body. It does not meet the USRCCA requirements for a body.
You can only follow the rules for the category that applies to what you're building.
and on a side note, just out of curiosity, who actually makes a comp 2.2 kit at this point?
No one, want to know why - the market is dead. That's right, this segment of RC is barely alive compared to other segments that are rolling in cash and sales.
How's that one big company doing who made a worm gear truck? They even had their own special mini class. How are they doing supporting RC Crawling now?
When it gained steam to be what it is now, things were changing in our rules and classes too quickly for a manufacturer to keep up and many deemed waiting to be smarter. After those changes, the market flat lined and now we are talking about limiting those companies who make bodies a big "oh so sorry we won't buy anymore because we got a new rule". Think how quickly they'd care to jump back in and help.
No one, want to know why - the market is dead. That's right, this segment of RC is barely alive compared to other segments that are rolling in cash and sales.
How's that one big company doing who made a worm gear truck? They even had their own special mini class. How are they doing supporting RC Crawling now?
When it gained steam to be what it is now, things were changing in our rules and classes too quickly for a manufacturer to keep up and many deemed waiting to be smarter. After those changes, the market flat lined and now we are talking about limiting those companies who make bodies a big "oh so sorry we won't buy anymore because we got a new rule". Think how quickly they'd care to jump back in and help.
maybe your right maybe not. losi had its own class,that nothing changed in, but they still stopped with production of the mini...
the core of the big company issue is not rules, it is very poor advertising on the part of the crawling world. they get no return for sponsoring, or developing so why do it?
to me it seems this segment of rc is so poorly advertised that noone cares..
since 2.2pro has been and will probably always be small vender based, due to the rapid changing enviroment, why limit it with hopes of grandure to get the big companies back that could in all honesty give two shits.
No one, want to know why - the market is dead. That's right, this segment of RC is barely alive compared to other segments that are rolling in cash and sales.
How's that one big company doing who made a worm gear truck? They even had their own special mini class. How are they doing supporting RC Crawling now?
When it gained steam to be what it is now, things were changing in our rules and classes too quickly for a manufacturer to keep up and many deemed waiting to be smarter. After those changes, the market flat lined and now we are talking about limiting those companies who make bodies a big "oh so sorry we won't buy anymore because we got a new rule". Think how quickly they'd care to jump back in and help.
I'm with you here. I contacted a few magazines about scale nats and comp nats for 2012. Nobody even knew they were going on until I let them know. If event organizers don't care enough to contact media outlets outside of RCC, why should outside vendors care about our niche?
The fact is this meets all the current rules and requirements. So by all records it is Legal...Why is this not legal, what is legal?
I really like the looks of your truck, but this is where I think the line is clearly drawn...do you honestly not think that is a body? Regardless of what it is made of, how thick it is or how it is mounted, would you or would you not call it a body?
I see a body. Therefore to me, that immediately puts it into the "bodied" section of the rules, and negates any "bodiless rules" that are trying to be applied to it, in order to make it "bodiless" legal.
The rules committee may have a different idea, but that's how I see it.
I really like the looks of your truck, but this is where I think the line is clearly drawn...do you honestly not think that is a body? Regardless of what it is made of, how thick it is or how it is mounted, would you or would you not call it a body?
I see a body. Therefore to me, that immediately puts it into the "bodied" section of the rules, and negates any "bodiless rules" that are trying to be applied to it, in order to make it "bodiless" legal.
The rules committee may have a different idea, but that's how I see it.
You cannot say something is a body just because it is made of the same material and manufactured the same way. A table is not a chair, they both use the same material and tools.
I understand why people are arguing it, but this is why it is controversial.
There needs to be a way to define it, not simply, well it looks like a body.
If I had made this out of delrin and cut out the sides, windows, etc. I suspect there would be less to talk about. But I pushed the design to the limits and according to the rules it is legal.
If they want to say that bodiless must be comprised of multiple pieces and a body is a single piece then that will be clear (arguably I could just cut it in half and fasten it together with aluminum spacers).
I am looking for a clear verdict as to what is legal and what is not. Like I said before where is the line. Any good designer will want to know that so they can push their designs as far as the can.
... until you flip it over.... This is where I didn't agree with referring to the body as a monocoque. It doesn't bear the load... the chassis underneath does. ...
... until you flip it over.
A 4" drop onto a horizontal surface with the vehicle upside down to check the structural integrity and stiffness of the cab should be a mandatory test at the tech table...
This is the exact reason. It doesn't look like a structural frame. It looks like a body with body panels slapped over it.
You keep trying to use rules that don't apply to what your cab fits into. I don't see how this isn't clear to you?
Let's play role reversal for a second. What do you think a body is? What sets your cab apart from being a body(and don't say body panels)?
There needs to be something put in place to specifically identify why this is not legal. Not just intent.
One side is going to get hurt either way...
When is the intent of the rule explained? When someone sees something they don't like? Or is different?
I'm sure you are just stirring the pot here, but Thumbs down. Bring all specs to bodiless size. There were tubers at 2006 nats too.
Its a body. Even if you make it out of Delrin its still a body.
The Rules Committee has lengthy discussions on almost every topic and then condenses those discussion down into manageable text. Do we cover every possibility in those final drafts.....No. Thats why we added the intent rule. Because every so often people try to do things that goes against what is clearly a violation. Your first clue that something might be wrong is when you have to put so much effort into justifying why its legal.
:twisted:
In 2006 it would seem absurd to reduce the body specs to tuber dimensions. It would be pure lunacy.
Now that all the cool kids play with bodiless it seems equally absurd to increase the spec to match bodies. (An idea that was kicked around at the time, but declined to do to avoid make some tubers illegal)
I am not saying the Spec rules will never change, but I am 99% sure its not happening anytime soon"thumbsup"
WE will however be defining what a body to help those needing more clarity:roll:
▪ 2.1.4 - Bodied vehicles: Any support chassis allowed
This is the only rule about Bodies. If they want to say a bodied vehicle is any single formed shell comprised of any material. Then we can call it a body.
The fact that is, it's not a purchased body, it resembles my bodiless vehicle that passed inspection at 2011 nationals, and Does have body panels.
To others points, why is there a difference in classification sizes, and how much advantage do you really think it offers. If you think it offers little advantage then what is the problem?