Sad to see that the Trail King Pro is gone, I think we all hope for a v2 version and wish we had grabbed another before they went to the wayside.
I wanted to Document my Trail King Comanche which is my favorite truck I have and the one that takes the most abuse and gets the most miles on it.
Bear with me as I reach back a few years and my Photo skills for RC were LACKING.
Starting from the beginning I wanted to build a "custom" truck I had gotten out of RC in 2018 and sold and thrown away all but one truck my Trusty TF2. Having gotten that back running I wanted to have another truck to see if the RC bug would bite again, and is sure as hell did. But 3 years and 15+ trucks later this is still my undisputed favorite.
Introducing my TK Pro! The fusion did go in it but the MTRs didn't end up on it till recently this year.
Rear Axle and the only assembly picture of the Kit.
Boom a body sitting on a chassis. I thought the comanche looked cool and I didn't have to paint it so from ebay it came!
I was terrified that the body was going to explode on the slightly rollover so I build and Exo cage, I have come to find that the Comanche body is probably the strongest hardbody ever. But with 2 wrenches and a vice I bend up a cage and Mig welded it together, then dremeled down the welds to make it look less lumpy.
Maybe a wooden welding bend isn't the best idea...
With the Cage done, I moved to the front bumper, I had picked up and RC4wd Warn 9.5 CTi for it and went about making it fit.
Yes its slight uneven and had remained so. I look at it as a lesson for my first RC Bumper project.
First test run with a painted Cage and unpainted bumper. Also missing a bunch of detail work. Also check out the RC4WD Rock Crushers that I had laying around. They were hard as rock but looked cool.
Bumper all finished up.
Finished the body with all the scale bits, and added lights. I also picked up a Futaba 4pm for the truck. I figured a nice truck deserved a nice radio.
You'll see a lot of this rock its one of my favorite places to take pictures of my trucks.
The Side Mirrors only lasted about 2 runs before they were ripped on.
As can be seen. This was a first Long hike I took the truck on, about 6 miles total, being November and only about 30 degrees I learned real fast lipos don't last as long in the cold and exhausted both 3000 mah 3s by mile 4 and had to run the last couple miles on a 2s pack. which made the truck painfully slow. Something I fixed later.
My goal was to drive the entire trail, even it it meant winching, I mean I had a winch and land anchor I was gonna use it!
And I needed it...
The Duratrax Scalers are actually not a have bad tire and for a more street style look I think they worked out alright.
But in the end I made it to the Lake and realized how much I loved hiking with an RC truck. It just made it so much more fun.
Next Up I wanted a touch more performance so I grabbed my old set of R35 Ripsaws, that I picked up back probably in 2013? slapped them on and went out with some friends.
One of which is a Profession Sports Photographer and got some killer shots. this one still remains my favorite. Thanks Matty!
This is how the truck remained for a while and will be the end of Chapter 1 of the Comanche.
I wanted to Document my Trail King Comanche which is my favorite truck I have and the one that takes the most abuse and gets the most miles on it.
Bear with me as I reach back a few years and my Photo skills for RC were LACKING.
Starting from the beginning I wanted to build a "custom" truck I had gotten out of RC in 2018 and sold and thrown away all but one truck my Trusty TF2. Having gotten that back running I wanted to have another truck to see if the RC bug would bite again, and is sure as hell did. But 3 years and 15+ trucks later this is still my undisputed favorite.
Introducing my TK Pro! The fusion did go in it but the MTRs didn't end up on it till recently this year.
Rear Axle and the only assembly picture of the Kit.
Boom a body sitting on a chassis. I thought the comanche looked cool and I didn't have to paint it so from ebay it came!
I was terrified that the body was going to explode on the slightly rollover so I build and Exo cage, I have come to find that the Comanche body is probably the strongest hardbody ever. But with 2 wrenches and a vice I bend up a cage and Mig welded it together, then dremeled down the welds to make it look less lumpy.
Maybe a wooden welding bend isn't the best idea...
With the Cage done, I moved to the front bumper, I had picked up and RC4wd Warn 9.5 CTi for it and went about making it fit.
Yes its slight uneven and had remained so. I look at it as a lesson for my first RC Bumper project.
First test run with a painted Cage and unpainted bumper. Also missing a bunch of detail work. Also check out the RC4WD Rock Crushers that I had laying around. They were hard as rock but looked cool.
Bumper all finished up.
Finished the body with all the scale bits, and added lights. I also picked up a Futaba 4pm for the truck. I figured a nice truck deserved a nice radio.
You'll see a lot of this rock its one of my favorite places to take pictures of my trucks.
The Side Mirrors only lasted about 2 runs before they were ripped on.
As can be seen. This was a first Long hike I took the truck on, about 6 miles total, being November and only about 30 degrees I learned real fast lipos don't last as long in the cold and exhausted both 3000 mah 3s by mile 4 and had to run the last couple miles on a 2s pack. which made the truck painfully slow. Something I fixed later.
My goal was to drive the entire trail, even it it meant winching, I mean I had a winch and land anchor I was gonna use it!
And I needed it...
The Duratrax Scalers are actually not a have bad tire and for a more street style look I think they worked out alright.
But in the end I made it to the Lake and realized how much I loved hiking with an RC truck. It just made it so much more fun.
Next Up I wanted a touch more performance so I grabbed my old set of R35 Ripsaws, that I picked up back probably in 2013? slapped them on and went out with some friends.
One of which is a Profession Sports Photographer and got some killer shots. this one still remains my favorite. Thanks Matty!
This is how the truck remained for a while and will be the end of Chapter 1 of the Comanche.