Centre Diff
#1
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From: , CYPRUS
Hey guys,
I have a friends RC car which I am trying to setup/fix.
It has a centre differential and from driving it, it handles much like a FWD car. It has a rear swaybar so it kind of understeers on throttle (the front wheels start spinning) and oversteers off throttle. It's fairly easy to drive though this way however it lacks acceleration because it just spins up the front wheels
I have a locked centre diff for it as well and wondering which would be best to use? Open or locked?
I notice with my car which has no centre diff, power oversteer happens relatively often where as the car with the centre diff has no chance of doing that
Suggestions??
I have a friends RC car which I am trying to setup/fix.
It has a centre differential and from driving it, it handles much like a FWD car. It has a rear swaybar so it kind of understeers on throttle (the front wheels start spinning) and oversteers off throttle. It's fairly easy to drive though this way however it lacks acceleration because it just spins up the front wheels
I have a locked centre diff for it as well and wondering which would be best to use? Open or locked?
I notice with my car which has no centre diff, power oversteer happens relatively often where as the car with the centre diff has no chance of doing that
Suggestions??
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From: , CYPRUS
The oversteer/understeer isn't an issue, i'll set it up later
I'm just wondering what is better overall for a asphalt track
Open centre diff or no centre diff?
I'm just wondering what is better overall for a asphalt track
Open centre diff or no centre diff?
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From: , CYPRUS
To be honest I liked how my single speed was...
The 2 speed is sort of annoying because when rolling and going onto throttle it "hits" too hard when the one way and the shaft reach the same speed
Plus I like the noise the engine makes when you let go of the gas but its still in high revs from the roll
The 2 speed is sort of annoying because when rolling and going onto throttle it "hits" too hard when the one way and the shaft reach the same speed
Plus I like the noise the engine makes when you let go of the gas but its still in high revs from the roll
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From: Athens/Patras, GREECE
Well it's ok to me but engine braking will be always causing rear end unstability while cornering. If you don't lock it then during a corner front wheels steer and tend to decelerate while weight transfers happens to the front end wich tends to lift the rear end...that reduces rear traction while center differential transfers torque to the rear wheels and you loose rear end!!! Once you lock it this fixes but you still have the engine braking issue.
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From: , CYPRUS
I will lock it and see how it goes
In reality it's not serious racing, just me and a friend "bashing" on a track really
I've never driven on a track before and I'm looking forward to it
In reality it's not serious racing, just me and a friend "bashing" on a track really
I've never driven on a track before and I'm looking forward to it
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From: MACAU, MACAU
if you are doing on road, the center diff can be locked. The purpose of the center diff is to split power between front and rear axles. If it is locked, the rear axle gest 50% of power everytime you nail on the throttle, if the center diff is unlocked (also depends on how hard diff oil you use), some of the power will be transfer to the front (minus from the rear) axles during acceleration, making it more like a FWD car, easier to drive.
I think you will need harder springs for on road.
I think you will need harder springs for on road.







