HerrSavage
Posts: 10222
Score: 318 Joined: 9/17/2005 Last Login: 5/23/2013 From: Irgendwo, GERMANY Status: offline
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OK, this seems to be a winter for these kinds of threads. So here goes.. I recently sold my RC8.2, luckily - for a not too awful price. Though I still had to eat probably €200 to sell it.. But the reality is, I was lucky to find someone at all. Part of my thinking was, I finally need to just try a Mugen. Was going to get an MBX6R EU, but the more I read about the MBX7, the more I thought, if you're going to be a bear... A Mugen MBX7 would cost €525 just for the kit. Add in a few spare arms and two sets of tires, and you're at €600 easy. Engines and servos I have.. Getting a Mugen though requires having spares on hand of yet another brand.. I recently got a TT MT4 G3 - my first brushless. So far I really quite like it. Good fun, parts are widely available and cheap(and in some cases - diffs anyway, identical with those in my RC8T and SC8), etc.. I just made a big order of spares for my RC8T and MT4 - so sorted really - especially on diffs.. A big part of my RC thinking in general is that I just can't make the commitment for racing that is required - at least here in Germany. A lot of people show up to races Friday afternoon, and are then at the track ALL day Saturday and Sunday. Even though in the last couple of years a regional series started where it is theoretically possible to just show up Sunday morning(with no practice for set up etc..) Whatever.., it's still too much. Even at the local track. %90 of the races require a one to two hour drive on top of all that.. When you show up at a race here, the parking lot is FULL of RV/mobile RC garages's...... I'm not buying an RV. Anyway, as I've been mulling over the idea(and cost) of getting the Mugen, I decided to take a look at the TT EB4 G3 - the cheap sister buggy to the MT4 G3. The price, including 4s Reedy lipo(same which I have two of for my MT4..), would be €380 shipped.., RTR. It would share the diffs(also with the AE's), chassis, motor, and some other stuff with my MT4. Obviously the EB4 is no Mugen. But I eventually arrived at the question - who needs a €1000 race buggy? Not me - and honestly, not most people - at least at RCU. Which also made me think about value in RC in general. If you pay attention to race forums, you can really see how sucked in people get.. "When's the new model coming out?" This kind of question - preposterously - often surfaces three to six months after the current one is released. A couple years ago I guess, the chassis' on buggies started getting really narrow. The MBX7? Wider chassis than the 6... AE is supposedly working on an RC8.3 - I'll have to laugh if the chassis is wider than on the RC8.2.. Wouldn't surprise me though. The conclusion I'm coming to is that the high-end buggy market is a racket, and it thrives basically on suckers addicted to novelty. The MBX7 is a beautiful buggy, and it did just win the Worlds.. But am I going to win the Worlds?..... I would add here, I have come to the conclusion that Mugen is the only new brand of high-end buggy I would buy. And the reason is not the quality(which of course is meant to be great) - the reason is resale value. The Worlds' win just gave that a shot in the arm too. There is another aspect to value in RC - a psychological one to do with cost. If you have a $1200 toy car, you're going to treat it, run it, and think about it differently than if it were a $500 RC. For me anyway, I'm more careful, maybe don't run it as much - because the whole time you're thinking, the more I run it, the less valuable it becomes. With the cheaper RC's, you KNOW it's cheap, and that you won't be able to sell it for much, so you just run it and have fun with it.. Part of this is just knowing you got a deal. Makes everything feel better. Of course everybody has a different budget. And there's nothing wrong with people laying out big bucks to have a top-end RC. Even if people want to invest two grand in a shelf-queen Savage or Revo - more power to them. It's their money. I do think though there are other people out there, who, when it comes to thinking about what RC to buy, feel like they have to spend way more money than is necessary. I have been one of those for a few years now ha ha... But - and this is oft-repeated, even if you take racing seriously - buying a Mugen is not going to make you into a champion driver. Making that kind of investment though will carry with a certain amount of psychological pressure, which will probably lead you to taking racing far more seriously.. Which is why IMO racing is so lame and humorless.. If you have two grand invested in your junk, then I guess drilling shock pistons becomes an activity of particular interest..... Anyway, in the last few days I came to a conclusion. I'm going to get a TT EB4 G3, and forget about my Mugen (particularly, and high-end RC generally..) dreams. I don't need a Mugen.. What I need is to have fun, and it's easier to do that with the clearer conscious that comes with having bought something for less than half the price, which is still robust and possible to have a lot of fun with, and if I smash it up, I have plenty of parts for... So that was the weird realization that I've to come to - there can be a point where it makes sense to go down-market in RC. No, the prestige isn't there. But the value is. And that's the point. I mean, IMO anyway, it is seriously retarded to get too wrapped up in the prestige anyway. We are talking toy cars here.. Value for you is what matters, not value as seen through other peoples' eyes... But it's an easy trap to fall into - feeling like you have to have "the best".. But a trap it is. So yes, that was a (half-awake, early-morning, pre-coffee) ramble.. But there's a point in there somewhere.
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Nitro > stamp collecting, watching grass grow, cleaning room, etc.. > electric.
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