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Losi 1/10th Roller

you can tell who just got into rc because of the crawlers by the sae vs met. issue. I would think that anyone who has been in the hobby and had more than one car would have no problem. One thing that is getting a little over done is not kits just race rollers, or am I the only one here that enjoys putting the things together?


Huh? Seriously? Just got into RC? Let me know how many new kits have come out with standard hardware in the last 5 years and who they are from. Metric has taken over in the RC hobby. Welcome to 2008 :lol:

I don't understand th 4-40 call. Looks like I will have to stock up on taps because I will be replacing everything I can with 3mm.
 
Rich has already addressed this and I commend him for standing up and taking ownership of his decision. Doesn't mean I agree with it ;) But I respect his honesty. Normally there's a lot of hemming, hawing, and fingerpointing. It's refreshing to see someone with a fairly empty bag of excuses.


The first car I get of a certain model, I prefer to build so that I can get a feel for the whole thing. After that, give me the roller. I want to drive, not wrench (with my metric tools :D ).

100% agree on both as well. If you have built one you have built enough, give me an ARTR "thumbsup"
 
I remember when the Kyosho USA-1 first came out in 1990. I have doing this for a while and much prefer metric hardware. That nonsense about Metric vs SAE determining how long you have been doing this is BS.
 
*** My First Test Session ***

Thank you all for the wonderful comments on Losi's 1/10th Compitition Crawler, this will be the one to have for sure. Here is a few key points that I noticed while driving it for a few days.

DIG: The operation of the DIG is outstanding, no sticking or fighting of the cogs results in a smooth shifting at the craziest articulaiton. Shifting on the fly at full throttle it didn't skip a beat. Not once did I wonder if it was in DIG or 4WD, for being a mechanical system it feels like it's electric.

WORM DRIVE: Gone are the worries of the wheels rolling backwards/forward when letting off the throttle on steep hills or drops. No torque twist what-so-ever, you can go forward reverse and pop the front wheels up at the same time, great for those sections you need to launch over. With the high clearence of the axles this rig felt like was floating over the most jagged rocks compared to all the rigs that like to stick to the rocks instead of gliding over.


Overall: Driving this is a treat! Driving off a steep cliff always makes our butt cheaks tighten up, with this you can creep up to the edge without any use of the DIG because the worm holds the rig steady, better then any drag brake I've driven. Steering is the best on the market too, I'm sure all of you have turned a circle to see how tight your rig turns, this will just about double the steering we all have now, then if you use the DIG it will turn on a dime.

The best part about it: It has the correct link geometry out of the box. Gone are the days of axle wrap, axle steer, torque twist, and any other issue dealing with the links.

4-40 for life...
 
Hey Rubba, I Was Wondering When You Where Going To Chime In. Thanks For The Review. Looks Like The Rig To Have For The Winter Series(crossed Fingers).
 
Awesome. Now that i have the carvers, this beauty is coming. So where are the Losi groundbreaking bead locks?
Does it come with a set of SAE-tools? Here in metric land its hard do get that stuff. :razz:
Well there´s always something people must bitch about, even if it´s the nuts and bolts.
 
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I traded a WK based rig for an assoc. B4. I started to work on it and did the "wait a minute... why don't my tools fit?"
just had to root through the real tool box to dig ot the sae allens, but I was down to pliers trying to get the axle nuts off.
 
Thank you all for the wonderful comments on Losi's 1/10th Compitition Crawler, this will be the one to have for sure. Here is a few key points that I noticed while driving it for a few days.

DIG: The operation of the DIG is outstanding, no sticking or fighting of the cogs results in a smooth shifting at the craziest articulaiton. Shifting on the fly at full throttle it didn't skip a beat. Not once did I wonder if it was in DIG or 4WD, for being a mechanical system it feels like it's electric.

WORM DRIVE: Gone are the worries of the wheels rolling backwards/forward when letting off the throttle on steep hills or drops. No torque twist what-so-ever, you can go forward reverse and pop the front wheels up at the same time, great for those sections you need to launch over. With the high clearence of the axles this rig felt like was floating over the most jagged rocks compared to all the rigs that like to stick to the rocks instead of gliding over.


Overall: Driving this is a treat! Driving off a steep cliff always makes our butt cheaks tighten up, with this you can creep up to the edge without any use of the DIG because the worm holds the rig steady, better then any drag brake I've driven. Steering is the best on the market too, I'm sure all of you have turned a circle to see how tight your rig turns, this will just about double the steering we all have now, then if you use the DIG it will turn on a dime.

The best part about it: It has the correct link geometry out of the box. Gone are the days of axle wrap, axle steer, torque twist, and any other issue dealing with the links.

4-40 for life...

See, now all you had to do was tell me three weeks ago that this was in the makings (when I asked you this specifically!!! lol). I knew it damnit! I think I might have to drive up to Denver to see this thing Jay?!
 
Imperial VS Metric, in RC is more of an old school 2WD offroad thing. Back in the day the best performing kits had SAE hardware. Just takes a while for us old timers to remember metric no longer equals crap. However still, this kit coming with SAE hardware makes me feel (without merit, mind you) that this kit is a cut above the metric masses.

There's not a lot of vehicles that use SAE anymore, but some recent releases are Losi 8ight & 8ight-T, latest editions of XXX and XXXT vehicles, AE recently released two new pan cars, also the TC4 & TC5, and I believe CRC still releases their cars in SAE, I know my CRC Carpet Knife Gen X is.

At any rate, I'm stoked to get it!
 
i say sack up, go to sears and get some tools. the more tools a man has the of a man he is!! haha i could care less what tools i need i will lose those too.

as far as wishing for a kit to build. its a crawler and its going to break or "need" to be tweaked so i see this thing being taken apart many times. at least mine will when i get it.
 
There's not a lot of vehicles that use SAE anymore, but some recent releases are Losi 8ight & 8ight-T, latest editions of XXX and XXXT vehicles, AE recently released two new pan cars, also the TC4 & TC5, and I believe CRC still releases their cars in SAE, I know my CRC Carpet Knife Gen X is.

The new Associated pan cars don't count entirely. They use both standard and metric in the same kit depending on what parts were carried over from the past. :-P It made building the RC10R5 fun.
 
I'm glad that SAE hardware is the only short-coming you guys are seeing.

I can't remember the last major release that something so insignificant is the only complaint. :-P
 
dig.jpg



this is a simply brilliant design! The actual 'dig' functionwill be in the axle where the worm gear meets the pinion gear. This unit will simply disconnenct the drive power to one of the axles. Someone is thinking!
 
Good find on the video wrightcs77. Anybody know the wheel offset? Comparable to Axial offset? Just put in for two at the LHS and wanting to get some wheels in the works.
 
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