I hate you all. Now I desperately want a Yokomo Team Samurai FC3S, or a Tamiya Lancia 037 rally car. I can only find one Yokomo FC kit for sale and it's in Japan. Profound sadness...
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Feb. 10, 2012 8:14 p.m. RexSeven SuperDork
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Feb. 10, 2012 10:42 p.m. moparman76_69 Reader
I have a stampede that stock is good enough to satiate my appetite for large scale R/C. If I feel the need to play with faster on-road cars I break out the x-mods. Small scale stuff is much lighter on the wallet. Leaves more room for the big toys.
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Feb. 11, 2012 12:14 a.m. Appleseed SuperDork
A Stamped with a Traxxas VXL brushless and a LiPo will smoke just about anything. Just sayin'.
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Feb. 11, 2012 12:41 p.m. Teh E36 M3 Dork
How's the traxxas slash? I was thinking of getting one for my 8 yr old son (haha) to run in the back yard. Are there "entry" cars that don't break easily and don't cost $250? Is the slash tough enough to have low maintenance?
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Feb. 11, 2012 3:04 p.m. Strizzo SuperDork
In reply to Teh E36 M3:
For an 8 yr old if they still make the rustler it'd be the one. If rpm still makes nylon arms they're nearly indestructible
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Feb. 11, 2012 5:55 p.m. Volksrodden Dork
I would go the Slash route, I have for my seven year old daughter and it holds up very well to her abuse, (the Slash is the Baja buggy in my avatar). I also have her do all the maintenance on the slash her self.
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Feb. 11, 2012 6:14 p.m. Appleseed SuperDork
The Slash uses 70-85% of the parts that the Stampede does. Lot of interchange there. I'd like to think the full sized body helps shrug off even more abuse.
Look for a used Slash instead. Aside from the electronics, there isn't anything that can be broken on that, assuming the seller isn't up on maintenance, that can't be bought for $2-25.
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Feb. 11, 2012 6:27 p.m. friedgreencorrado SuperDork
Oh, why did I go looking..now I know what to do with the FF01.
http://viewitem.eim.ebay.eu/-VW-CORRADO-body-110th-LEXAN-kamtec-window-masks-028/3...
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Feb. 12, 2012 12:21 p.m. T.J. SuperDork
Damn GRM...I was kicking around the house trying to put of a kitchen faucet replacement when thanks to this thread got out my car, charged up my 13 year old NiCd's and drove all over the house and driveway.
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Feb. 12, 2012 8:55 p.m. Ian F SuperDork
ultraclyde wrote:
I went from here to the Tamiya site. they've reissued a lot of the mid 80's stuff, including my first the Grasshopper buggy. Man that thing was a blast and took stupid amounts of punishment. With the bigger motor I put in you could be running full out forward and throw it into full reverse, it would pivot 180 degrees and just keep hauling - but now running backwards.
Geez that brings back memories! gonna be hard to ignore those as cheap as they are....
Damnit.... I did not need to see this:
http://www.tamiyausa.com/product/item.php?product-id=58519
It seems the Tamiya marketing folks have realized kids of the 80's (me) are now able to afford some of those kits that were way out of reach when they were kids. Bastards.
And how could any one of us not want one of these:
http://www.tamiyausa.com/product/item.php?product-id=84263
Also - +1 on kits vs. RTR. Hell, building the car was half the fun.
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Feb. 12, 2012 10:51 p.m. mmosbey Reader
Ian F wrote:
There goes my eBay window of opportunity. I have a Bruiser. It's not great to drive, but it sure was nice to look at. It really needs a fresh body and some TLC now, so the upside is that I'll be able to get some parts!ultraclyde wrote:
I went from here to the Tamiya site. they've reissued a lot of the mid 80's stuff, including my first the Grasshopper buggy. Man that thing was a blast and took stupid amounts of punishment. With the bigger motor I put in you could be running full out forward and throw it into full reverse, it would pivot 180 degrees and just keep hauling - but now running backwards.
Geez that brings back memories! gonna be hard to ignore those as cheap as they are....
Damnit.... I did not need to see this:
http://www.tamiyausa.com/product/item.php?product-id=58519
It seems the Tamiya marketing folks have realized kids of the 80's (me) are now able to afford some of those kits that were way out of reach when they were kids. Bastards.
And how could any one of us not want one of these:
http://www.tamiyausa.com/product/item.php?product-id=84263
Also - +1 on kits vs. RTR. Hell, building the car was half the fun.
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Feb. 13, 2012 8:06 a.m. Strizzo SuperDork
In reply to mmosbey:
i'm sure the original versions will still sell at a premium to certain collectors
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Feb. 13, 2012 8:25 a.m. Ian F SuperDork
I'm sure... I remember looking at Bruiser kits a few years ago and seeming prestine trucks with asking prices well over a grand.
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Feb. 13, 2012 10:30 a.m. z31maniac SuperDork
Yikes, that's a pricey kit! Super cool though.
I've wanted to build a scale crawler type RC for a while, but I know I wouldn't use it much.
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Feb. 13, 2012 12:55 p.m. PeterAK Dork
I had a Grasshopper back in the day too. Remember being so excited to upgrade to the 540! I think there is an old RC10 in a box somewhere in the basement.
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Feb. 13, 2012 1:02 p.m. akamcfly Reader
Ian F wrote:
And how could any one of us not want one of these:
Damn you...
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Feb. 13, 2012 3:25 p.m. rickybobby New Reader
Now I am remembering what happened to all the money I earned in High School went.
Started with an RC10, then went RC10L with a heavy obsession with carpet oval racing.
Sold everything when I went to college (1992). Haven't been in touch with the hobby since.... just a few fleeting thoughts of "maybe I will take this up again". Then I remember how it consumed me and slowly back away.
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Feb. 17, 2012 1:34 p.m. friedgreencorrado SuperDork
Bringing back the R/C thread, because y'all gotta see this:
http://carscoop.blogspot.com/2012/02/canadian-digs-out-basement-using-only.html
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Feb. 17, 2012 1:43 p.m. Ian F SuperDork
In reply to friedgreencorrado:
That's both awesome and scary...
Awesome because... well, it is...
And scary to see what long, cold Canadian winters can do to a person...

