Ok taken that into account and I drew out about body getting ready to cut it out as soon as amazon delivers my new scroll saw bladesTwo places I’d leave a little more meat on the chassis. Front axle & nose. Both of those places will be extremely thin by the time you finish shaping the nose.
Here's another thought... and I hope one of the gurus chimes in here... Can that shape also cause a little "lift" making the front a wee bit more unstable? (meaning almost lighter going down the track with wind going under like an airfoil.)Not sure if it makes a difference, but I always bring the bottom of the front up a bit on the sander as well. My feeling being this could prevent a cartwheel while slamming into a bad stop section.
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Here's another thought... and I hope one of the gurus chimes in here... Can that shape also cause a little "lift" making the front a wee bit more unstable? (meaning almost lighter going down the track with wind going under like an airfoil.)
I borrowed (and when I say borrowed, I mean stole) the idea from HurriCrane. Our Scout Pack races on a pretty rough track, so I felt it was insurance against a car doing a gymnastics routine, and out of habit I've done it to my league cars as well.
However, I agree with your thoughts. How could it not create a little lift. Is it enough to make any measurable difference? I have no idea, I'm certainly not fast enough for it to matter!![]()
Um... no ... lolOr does it shoot it faster like a missle or space shuttle fuel tank or an airplane fusilage......who knows. Test it jimmy
Yeah it was a little overkill. That vid popped a couple weeks ago on my feed. It’s an older race. I remembered seeing that in the news. Mercedes has that issue 3 times that weekend.Dramatic explanation there jimmy