Great racing, proper lightweight machines

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rawsco
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Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by rawsco » Sat Nov 28, 2015 5:06 pm

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tut
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by tut » Sat Nov 28, 2015 5:21 pm

Amazing control but it made me dizzy.

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by pete » Sat Nov 28, 2015 11:52 pm

Wow.
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by rawsco » Sun Nov 29, 2015 3:04 am

pete wrote:Wow.
It's brilliant I'd rather watch that over the f1 crappy precession every fortnight.. I really enjoyed watching it proper mansel//Senna style battle at 1/10 utterly committed 100% racing
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by dlogan » Sun Nov 29, 2015 8:13 pm

I used to race these 1/10 scale buggies at British championship level. The guys on there are at a really high level mostly salaried drivers for manufacturers. Its much much harder than it looks. :)

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by campbell » Wed Dec 02, 2015 12:39 am

I am in no doubt that's hard! But what a great compo. Best not show the wee lad... eek
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by pete » Wed Dec 02, 2015 1:58 am

dlogan wrote:I used to race these 1/10 scale buggies at British championship level. The guys on there are at a really high level mostly salaried drivers for manufacturers. Its much much harder than it looks. :)
Is it?

I mean to me it looks really really hard.
'99 - '03 Titanium S1 111S.
'03 - '10 Starlight Black S2 111S
'11 - '17 S2 135R
'17 - '19 S2 Exige S+
'23 - ?? Evora

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Victor Meldrew
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Victor Meldrew » Wed Dec 02, 2015 2:08 am

pete wrote:
dlogan wrote:I used to race these 1/10 scale buggies at British championship level. The guys on there are at a really high level mostly salaried drivers for manufacturers. Its much much harder than it looks. :)
Is it?

I mean to me it looks really really hard.
At top level it is brutally competitive. There is a massive performance difference in what joe public can buy over the counter and what the works drivers get handed to them. I was lucky to get a "used" works motor from one of the factory drivers, the motor was scrap by his standards but it was by far the most powerful motor I ever had. I was a factory "assisted" driver for a while, which was different to a works driver in that I never got any parts given to me, just set up info.

Gave that all up 12 years ago, still have all the race gear in the attic.
Well it moves... might as well make the most of it....

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by pete » Wed Dec 02, 2015 3:42 am

I think you are underestimating how hard I think it is. It looks INSANELY hard!

I'd just get stuck when the car wasn't moving away from me. I always get left and right confused.
'99 - '03 Titanium S1 111S.
'03 - '10 Starlight Black S2 111S
'11 - '17 S2 135R
'17 - '19 S2 Exige S+
'23 - ?? Evora

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by dlogan » Wed Dec 02, 2015 7:56 am

Victor Meldrew wrote:
pete wrote:
dlogan wrote:I used to race these 1/10 scale buggies at British championship level. The guys on there are at a really high level mostly salaried drivers for manufacturers. Its much much harder than it looks. :)
Is it?

I mean to me it looks really really hard.
At top level it is brutally competitive. There is a massive performance difference in what joe public can buy over the counter and what the works drivers get handed to them. I was lucky to get a "used" works motor from one of the factory drivers, the motor was scrap by his standards but it was by far the most powerful motor I ever had. I was a factory "assisted" driver for a while, which was different to a works driver in that I never got any parts given to me, just set up info.

Gave that all up 12 years ago, still have all the race gear in the attic.
What gear do you still have John? There is a bit of a market/demand for older gear. (My Tenth Technology Predator turned up recently on Facebook after the new owner in south korea tracked me down, it didn't look much different than when it was raced in 1994)
I had a brief foray in 2012 prior to getting back into the karting. Its changed a fair bit in the last 10 yrs, its all about big power now that its lipo batteries and brushless motors. No more skill in driving smoothly and avoiding dumping before the 5 minutes are up. Now its about big commitment on big jumps and not breaking your car in the 5 minutes. I struggled a wee bit with that especially adjusting the car mid flight in the jumps, thats tough.
I sold all my kit though still just got the tools (just in case) :D

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Victor Meldrew » Wed Dec 02, 2015 8:20 am

It is mostly touring car stuff. X-ray cars and I may have a Corally hidden away somewhere. There is a predator chassis but not complete..




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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Dominic » Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:21 am

Very impressive skills!
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Dominic » Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:22 am

Victor Meldrew wrote: There is a predator chassis but not complete..


You didn't give it to some dodgy garage to work on did you? :leave
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Victor Meldrew
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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Victor Meldrew » Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:29 am

Dominic wrote:
Victor Meldrew wrote: There is a predator chassis but not complete..


You didn't give it to some dodgy garage to work on did you? :leave
Ha ha... like it..
Well it moves... might as well make the most of it....

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Re: Great racing, proper lightweight machines

Post by Corranga » Thu Dec 03, 2015 9:43 am

I used to race at club level when I was in my teens running a Schumacher Bosscat with an Alfa 155 / Toyota Celica GT4 / Just a regular buggy shell on. The main issues seemed to be that there was no standard class structure in my local club, so we had people at completion level building cars from crap / slow spares and entering the beginners race meaning the beginners had no chance, and with a little bit of talent you could just stick in a faster motor and win. Still I enjoyed it for a couple of years.

I revived it a little back in the late 00s with a friend, but using standard Tamiya kit (and my old office with was huge and empty ;) We both ended up with Tamiya Minis which were really good fun.

I'm going to say that it's not quite as hard as it initially looks (having never competed at that level of course) once you get a flow going. It's good fun though, especially if you can find even 1 or 2 people at a similar level to yourself.

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