Heavy duty Double stick tape. I have used 2 kinds, the one included in window shrink kits and thicker gorilla or 3m double stick tape. The thinner heavy duty tape is good for very thin bodies and the thicker one works well if the body is a bit thicker. You can finish it off with aluminum tape on the bottom of the car.Also, question for another car; what do you use to adhere cubes to the bottom of a hollowed-out car?
Heavy duty Double stick tape. I have used 2 kinds, the one included in window shrink kits and thicker gorilla or 3m double stick tape. The thinner heavy duty tape is good for very thin bodies and the thicker one works well if the body is a bit thicker. You can finish it off with aluminum tape on the bottom of the car.
Can the cubes stick out below the car just a little bit? 1/8" or less? I'm using standard axle slots so I think there's plenty of clearance, but am not certain. Thank you.
I would try to avoid having them stick out, but as long as you clear the track you are ok. Anything increasing the profile/height of the car will increase wind resistance but am sure alot of others will have weights glued to the bottom. Most rules state what your minimum clearance needs to be and should be based on the height of the center rail.Can the cubes stick out below the car just a little bit? 1/8" or less? I'm using standard axle slots so I think there's plenty of clearance, but am not certain. Thank you.
I would try to avoid having them stick out, but as long as you clear the track you are ok. Anything increasing the profile/height of the car will increase wind resistance but am sure alot of others will have weights glued to the bottom. Most rules state what your minimum clearance needs to be and should be based on the height of the center rail.
The only way to know for sure would be to test it, but I dont see it done on any pro cars but I could be missing something of course.I wonder if a little added wind resistance is a small price to pay for some added stability and lower weight placement which should improve speed (albeit by a tiny bit)
The only way to know for sure would be to test it, but I dont see it done on any pro cars but I could be missing something of course.
In APR their pure stock require standard wheelbase. Maybe one of those racers can way in.Well, I'm curious if its specifically advantageous when your rules require the kit wheelbase, which I assumed no pros use.
In the overall aspect of gaining speed the wheel and axle prep are key. The wheel base affects your tuning. With those in consideration you should find speed. The weight best serves those purposes being compact and focused accordingly but car by car and builders skill set.
Currently, I plan to utilize the 2 holes in the very back of my car to put two .5 ounce cylinders (about half will be countersunk the other half will stick up), and will have the 2.5 oz dome as far back as I can (slightly in front of the rear axle), and will have a 3/4" cog.
I could drill another hole in the back to add another .5 oz weight (or even .25, or something), but I'd have to remove a lot of weight from the front/middle of my car in order to do so, and I don't know how much weight I can save by just drilling a bunch of holes (whether they go all the way through or not). I'd rather not try to sand down the car to make it any thinner as it's already painted, and I don't have the time/tools to neatly cut out a large area.
Do you think that just 1 ounce in the very rear, and 2.5 in front of rear axle, is not good enough? Is it really in my best interest to try and get a lot more weight in the back? I could move the dome further back (and put the .5 cylinders in front of it to balance the cog) but then I worry that I'll have too much in the back which might make the car unstable.
Another option (if I have enough spare cylinders) is to nix the dome and just drill a bunch more holes in the back. Then I can place multiple more cylinders in the very back, over the axle and in front of the axle as necessary, to get more weight in the back and a good cog.
Is my current setup of just 1 oz in the very back going to cost me tenths of seconds, hundredths...? I know that's hard to answer...
I am going to do my best to properly prep the wheels and axles, so perhaps the weight is fine as is, but if you think it would save substantial time then I may try to take some drastic measures at this point.
For reference, our top 3 finishers last year had cumulative time (top 3 of 4 races) of 9.3821, 9.4503 and 9.5387, which is an average race of 3.127, 3.15 and 3.18. Therefore, hundredths do matter even in our local pack race.
Thanks again.
Let me see if I understand what you are trying to do ....you are thinking of add two taller weights to the rear of the car that weight .5 oz each and sliding the canopy back as far as t you can. And this will give you a 3/4" COG correct?
I could do the 3 holes in the back with .25 each (.75 total plus some tungsten putty, I wouldn't use lead), but I don't know how close to 1 ounce it would be (is the wind resistance a real factor or am I better just keeping the 1 ounce as is?).I might consider drilling a third hole and placing .25 oz weights in all 3 holes for a total of 3/4 oz. I would also then take a lead sinker and pound/shape it into the size of the holes that you have drilled. I would add this to all three holes until they are about flush. This should give you very close to 1 oz of total added weight behind the rear axle, but you won't have the weight sticking up or the added wind resistance. I would still move the canopy as far rearward as possible.
Have you weighed the FDW? What does it weight? If I were to guess, I would think it is probably between 20-22 grams. If your alignment is decent, you won't have an issue with the car being unstable with a FDW weight of 16 grams or more. It can go less, but let's start there. If the car is unstable with a FDW weight of 16 grams or more the problem lies in the alignment, wheel prep, wheels, axles, and maybe even wheel gap.
On a separate note, do you have a Forster bit? How about a drill press? Those two items would make it relatively easy to cut out weight from the bottom front of the car. This might not be the time to try it, but keep that in mind for the next time.
You would probably need to move the COG to around 0.600" or less to gain another 0.0100-0.015. For example, if you set the car up as a rail rider and do not put in enough steer, and the car wiggles 1-2 times it will cost you 0.010-0.020. The proper set up along with a near perfect alignment will help way more than moving the COG 0.100" at this point. My sons first rail runner from 4 years ago has a 1 1/8" COG (lead car) and a 5 1/8" WB. It is a graphite car and runs consistent 3.06x times. But, it runs straight and true.