Posted July 6, 20168 yr After 1 month of building this beast I'm proud to present Dug's build that is completely modular, has 1 l-motor to raise the rear wheels and 2 m-Motors to raise front wheel 5 studs higher, 1 servo for steering and 2 XL motors for drive, working V8 and fan at the engine. Designing and creating this truck was the most satisfying so far. 77 studs long x 39 high x 23 tall (slammed) Weight: 3kg = 6.6 pounds https://flic.kr/s/aHskCMJtR4 Slammed ride 100% modular Rear air ride Edited July 7, 20168 yr by Lox Lego
July 6, 20168 yr Nice work! I really like the lowering and raising of the body. And nice use of all the panels
July 6, 20168 yr Wow this is awesome! Love the lowering and raising off the ride hight. Cool design with the curved panels, great job!!!
July 6, 20168 yr Cool suspension mechanism, well done... The wheels seem a little small...aren't they?
July 6, 20168 yr Thanks everyone, I appreciate the comments! We'll be getting some better pics tonight to show a little more of the detail. On 7/6/2016 at 9:50 AM, 2LegoOrNot2Lego... said: Cool suspension mechanism, well done... The wheels seem a little small...aren't they? Yea the wheels are a little small but 1. I was working with what I have and 2. Those tires worked excellent on functionality but also keeping the bodywork proper. On 7/6/2016 at 9:52 AM, nicjasno said: You need to lower the steering rack by one stud to avoid massive bump steer. Unfortunately due to the massive raise and drop the steering rack is in the only place it works (trust me I tried haha) Edited July 6, 20168 yr by DugaldIC
July 6, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 9:56 AM, LvdH said: I think they can't be any bigger otherwise the slamming function wouldn't work properly. The wheels would touch the fenders. On 7/6/2016 at 10:08 AM, DugaldIC said: Yea the wheels are a little small but 1. I was working with what I have and 2. Those tires worked excellent on functionality but also keeping the bodywork proper. I didn't look that far yet, jumping to conclusions a little to fast...sorry... Thanks, it makes sense now for sure!
July 6, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 1:11 PM, 2LegoOrNot2Lego... said: I didn't look that far yet, jumping to conclusions a little to fast...sorry... Thanks, it makes sense now for sure! It's all good :) I like all the different views and reviews I get. It always gives me something to consider when working on another build. Thanks
July 6, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 10:08 AM, DugaldIC said: Unfortunately due to the massive raise and drop the steering rack is in the only place it works (trust me I tried haha) Precisely the reason why it needs to be lower. Make some more detailed pics of that area and we'll re-engineer it to be proper.
July 6, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 3:50 PM, nicjasno said: Precisely the reason why it needs to be lower. Make some more detailed pics of that area and we'll re-engineer it to be proper. If it's one lower when the truck drops the steering no longer functions, I know from the pic it looks wrong but I went through every height possibility and where it sits is the only way it worked with the truck raised and dropped. I'll get some more detailed pictures tonight and get them posted up so you can see. I appreciate the help though! :) (with the rack one lower the ball joints pop out everytime when it drops) The only thing what would actually fix it is an in between length on the tie rods, they should be one longer which would eliminate the strain on the rods themselves once raised and dropped (if you pause the video mid drop when showing how it works you'll see that when the control arms are straight, that the tie rods are at the proper height) Edited July 6, 20168 yr by DugaldIC
July 6, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 4:10 PM, nicjasno said: What is blocking the movement of the steering at that point? At full raise and drop due to the control arms being longer than the tie rods the tie rods end up on a steeper angle when maxed out :/! This was my biggest issue but with what I have I unfortunately have no way of correcting it. I'm need a tie rod that's one longer but I don't think they make one
July 6, 20168 yr Actually you need tie rods that are 2 studs longer. Your wishbones are 8 studs long. The better sollution here would be to use the 9l steering links. That would minimise the effect. The tie rods need to be paralel to the wishbones/driveshaft. So the steering rack needs to come down by 1 stud in any case. And you need to make it narrower (bring the points where the tie rods attach closer.) Edited July 6, 20168 yr by nicjasno
July 6, 20168 yr With keeping the truck 4wd the frame work can't be any narrower hence why I couldn't use any nine length rods as I had originally hopped I could use, as for the rack trust me it is in the only location it will work, the rods are running parallel with the wheel hubs where they need to be, I first thought I needed to lower it as well (so I know what you're getting at :p) but it's in the correct location, I don't know what more to say really.
July 6, 20168 yr Without pics of said area i can not comment further. All i see is the front view and there it is clearly too high. :)
July 7, 20168 yr On 7/6/2016 at 8:13 PM, nicjasno said: Without pics of said area i can not comment further. All i see is the front view and there it is clearly too high. :) Pictures have been added ;) creep away
July 7, 20168 yr I see the problem now. Indeed the only thing saving you would be longer steering links. Or shorter wishbones.
July 7, 20168 yr I'll give it a shot to see how it works before I tear it down, interesting fix! Edited July 7, 20168 yr by DugaldIC
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