Hey gang my kids and I are building 2 cars for our cub race and need some help with a steering issue on 1 of them.
Both are ladder cars with balsa covers. Drilled the rear axles at 2.5 degrees using a Pinewood Pro drill jig. Both have a bent front axle and are adjusted to steer about 2" in about 5 feet. (that's the length they can run on our test board). One car is using tungsten cubes and has a com of about 5/8. The other used lead and has a com just over 3/4. Axles are bsa kit axles polished to 12,000 grit. Wheels are graphite but other than that they are untouched. Wheels spin nice, the car bodies are both about .4 oz. and right at 5 with weight and wheels. Everything seemed great.
Here's where things get screwy. I added 2 guides to the board to have some simple way to test them against each other. The one using lead is consistently faster. It's faster from the start and keeps its rear wheels off the center guide. The car with tungsten starts a little slower and as soon as the DFW touches the guid e, the rear pulls in (on the same side as the DFW) and stays there as the car goes down the track. Again it's only 5 feet but I can see what's happening. I've tried changing the DFW axle's camber and amount of steer but neither has helped. My plan now is to pull the rear axles and check alignment using a couple of drill bits, and maybe move some of the cubes forward to take a little weight off of the rear wheels since they're just stock wheels with graphite.
Any thought from you all would be greatly appreciated, or if I've left out some important detail of the builds let me know.
Thanks,
B
Both are ladder cars with balsa covers. Drilled the rear axles at 2.5 degrees using a Pinewood Pro drill jig. Both have a bent front axle and are adjusted to steer about 2" in about 5 feet. (that's the length they can run on our test board). One car is using tungsten cubes and has a com of about 5/8. The other used lead and has a com just over 3/4. Axles are bsa kit axles polished to 12,000 grit. Wheels are graphite but other than that they are untouched. Wheels spin nice, the car bodies are both about .4 oz. and right at 5 with weight and wheels. Everything seemed great.
Here's where things get screwy. I added 2 guides to the board to have some simple way to test them against each other. The one using lead is consistently faster. It's faster from the start and keeps its rear wheels off the center guide. The car with tungsten starts a little slower and as soon as the DFW touches the guid e, the rear pulls in (on the same side as the DFW) and stays there as the car goes down the track. Again it's only 5 feet but I can see what's happening. I've tried changing the DFW axle's camber and amount of steer but neither has helped. My plan now is to pull the rear axles and check alignment using a couple of drill bits, and maybe move some of the cubes forward to take a little weight off of the rear wheels since they're just stock wheels with graphite.
Any thought from you all would be greatly appreciated, or if I've left out some important detail of the builds let me know.
Thanks,
B