I can't recall exactly what he said, but it was something like the following: I was interested in putting a brushless motor into my vintage car. He said it would ruin the gears. I said I was going to also use the slipper clutch. He said the slipper clutch doesn't always work (i.e., it doesn't slip sometimes) and the torque gets transferred to the gears. And if that happened it would effectively destroy them (or something like that).XLR8 wrote: ↑Thu May 31, 2018 10:20 amSo, please correct me if I'm wrong... Your local guy is effectively saying that by rolling out the re-release Kyosho has upgraded the transmission from plastic gears with a torque limiter to metal gears with a true slipper clutch and the result is less durability?NegativeGhostRider wrote: ↑Wed May 30, 2018 11:33 pm So here's my q (for either of you): Does the slipper clutch of the re re do a good job protecting the gears?
The reason I ask is that I asked the guy at my local RC shop if I should do the upgrade and get a modern brushless motor and esc and he said it doesn't always work and it would probably result in less durability rather than more. Opinions on whether he's right or wrong?
TIA
I don't know that either of us realized at the time that the gears were metal.
So I guess that leads to a few other questions: 1) is he right that the slipper clutch isn't effective in some non-trivial percentage of cases? 2) does the fact that the gears are metal mitigate damage that might be caused to plastic gears if the slipper doesn't work? 3) if the gears would be ok regardless, what else could fail if the slipper didn't operate?
Really, I'm just wanting to make sure I'm not being naive by trying to drop one of these into my car and then acting like I can mash the throttle any time or drive it off jumps with impunity. I would drive it responsibly, but there are certain young people (who live under my roof and eat all my food) that I anticipate will also drive it and may not be as kind to it as I am.
