Hi Derek,
I have added a 3mm spacer to the outside of the existing sprocket but haven't had time to test it yet.
Dennis.
Twin motor drive
-
- Posts: 892
- Joined: Wed Feb 04, 2009 11:19 am
- Location: Poole, Dorset
- Has liked: 10 times
- Been liked: 223 times
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Feb 14, 2021 8:08 pm
- Has liked: 2 times
- Been liked: 48 times
Re: Twin motor drive
Sorry Derek, I missed your question (family issues). The spacers are around 4mm thick but bear in mind that I have home-made sprockets too. If you are using the OEM sprockets then I'd say make the spacers thick enough to just fill the gap between the sprocket and the guides on the track links. You want it snug but not tight.
Pete
Pete
-
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2007 12:44 pm
- Location: london
- Has liked: 218 times
- Been liked: 183 times
Re: Twin motor drive
Hi Peter and Denis
Thanks for the replies.
Regards
Derek
Thanks for the replies.
Regards
Derek
we must stop making stupid predictions
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Feb 14, 2021 8:08 pm
- Has liked: 2 times
- Been liked: 48 times
Re: Twin motor drive
Further to the discussion regarding a driver (or lack of it) further up this thread I decided to find a middle ground between no driver and a doll.. er, I mean scale action figure in period correct outfit ( ). The pictures should need no further comment. The 'body' is balsa wood and the helmet was beaten out of a disc of steel against a wooden former and finished to shape with some body filler.
Hopefully it provides enough of an illusion of a driver. Kind of fits in with the 'jerry cans', more a suggestion of the object rather than a detailed representation.
In other news I managed to shed a track again. Turned out the rear bogies had moved, essentially pivoting upwards around the fixings which dropped the track tension considerably. I decided the M3 bolts were probably a bit small so drilled them out to M4. Definitely a lot more secure now. I also found a bug in the code that 'does' the steering which meant that after a turn, the inside track would stick at a very low speed, effectively locked in a stalled state. Fixed for now but more debugging required before I'm completely happy.
Pete
Hopefully it provides enough of an illusion of a driver. Kind of fits in with the 'jerry cans', more a suggestion of the object rather than a detailed representation.
In other news I managed to shed a track again. Turned out the rear bogies had moved, essentially pivoting upwards around the fixings which dropped the track tension considerably. I decided the M3 bolts were probably a bit small so drilled them out to M4. Definitely a lot more secure now. I also found a bug in the code that 'does' the steering which meant that after a turn, the inside track would stick at a very low speed, effectively locked in a stalled state. Fixed for now but more debugging required before I'm completely happy.
Pete
- John Clarke
- Posts: 1665
- Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2010 10:06 pm
- Location: Staffordshire
- Been liked: 1778 times
Re: Twin motor drive
Looks good to me nice little seat filler, from a short distance you'd be struggling to tell the difference from a real Eddie.
Oh Man, I only ride em I don't know what makes them work,
Definatley an Anti-Social type
Definatley an Anti-Social type