Making sure the boy knows not to 'Renner it.
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Making sure the boy knows not to 'Renner it.
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Oh Fuck Yes!
Picked up a Tekno SCT410.3. 1/10 scale kit but 1/8 scale based so heavy; supposedly ends up around 6.5 or 7 lbs ready to go. Is anyone deep enough into this money pit err hobby to have a preference on electronics? I'm leaning Futaba for radio and Hitec for servo because they are brands I know, and leaning Castle for ESC and motor although HobbyWing keeps coming up in searches. No experience with either of these. Gens Ace was recommended for batteries.
I'm relatively new to this so hopefully others will chime in, but those are all solid brands you've mentioned. One caveat, I enjoyed Hobbywing's stuff for the price but one of my HW esc's has crapped out after just a couple months of infrequent use. Just a single bad example so probably not even worth mentioning, but if you're asking for feedback there ya go.
I prefer castle systems. I like the tune ability of the ESCs.
If you are going to race it check your local rules on esc/motor size as that can dictate what your can run in it.
If your just messing around I like to over volt and gear down. Helps keep the temps down, letting you run longer.
Castles Copperhead can run on 4s, pair it with one one of their 1/8 motors and you will have more than enough motor for that truck. Run that combo on 3s and temps should stay nice and cool.
Hobbywing has bluetooth tuning built in, and are nice also. I prefer castle though
Reedy make a great esc/motor as well. Reedy is a little more race focused.
For servos. Shift RC makes a nice low profile race servo for about 85$ and have great customer service being a smaller company.
Reef also make nice servos.
I picked this up off of the classifieds for $100. I think the boy is going to shit. DJI makes some wild stuff. It's got a frickin laser and apparently it shoots those little gel balls (not sure if we're going to tell him about that part.) He has a couple of other robots and I thought he was just going to use them to chase the cat around but he's really gotten deep into the programming portion of them. I'll gladly foster the shit out of that. Where was some of this stuff when I was a kid?
https://www.dji.com/robomaster-s1
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This leads to SkyNet and Terminators looking for Sarah Connor.
Speaking of things that fly. Model rockets are always a hoot.
https://youtube.com/shorts/WLkKhrfjE...7IEd3Qf2FEog3UAttachment 469432
Nice! We got some rockets during the lockdowns and they're great.
Came here to mention Gel blaster guns. My nephew got one and it's been tons of fun. Ours is a generic amazon one but linking this as a reference.
https://gelblaster.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3S_FyprPQIE&t=3s
Serious suggestion. Sugar rockets. If you and the kids want to really get into it. Thing#3 learned a lot making his own fairly safe motors. They are a lot more involved than Estes, though. And a lot less predictable. Which is part of the fun. You have to apply science . He had a lot of appreciation for AP chem and AP physics after fooling around with rockets on his own . The kid is now a freshman at WPI for mechanical engineering. He's probably going to switch majors to aerospace.
We e given a number of complete kits as birthday presents to other kids. I Estes has a complete kit to get started with launcher and rocket for pretty cheap. They have them and tons of different ones for sale at West valley hobbies. Whole big aisle of model rocket shit.
Here ya go, $40 and you'll need to grab some engines...
https://estesrockets.com/products/tandem-x-launch-set
Good intro kit! I can't stress enough that if they get into it, to dig deeper into the chemistry, for engines, and physics, for the vehicle. YMMV. The younger two were partners in crime for a while. Some things did get set on fire that probably shouldn't have been. There's a good video of a fail that I'm trying to find to post. And I'm not gonna lie, there was a little Tom Fuckery with some gunpowder that got shut down right quick. Everyone still has their digits and eyes.
One of the absolute joys of being a parent was watching the kids find something and explore it. The sense of accomplishment from figuring stuff out is huge. And watching them connect the dots is amazing. Now the last one is in college and we have memories, pictures, videos, and ... college bills...
For engines there's a bunch of options listed on that link under Technical Specifications.
You'll notice the engines start with either A, B, C or D. Basically that letter refers to the engine's strength, A being the weakest, D the strongest. At first err on the weaker ones, unless you have access to a massive outdoor windless area. If you haven't seen a launch before these might surprise you with the altitude they can achieve.
Beyond that you'll need AA batteries for the launcher, starters (they come with the engines) and recovery wadding. The wadding protects the plastic parachute when the engine backfires to release the cone and expose the parachute.
Another note on engines: there are engines that backfire to trigger the parachute like Thaleia says, but there are also engines designed for the first stage of a two-stage rocket that don’t have that backfire, they’re just designed to ignite the following stage when it has burnt out.
TLDR, the final stage engine and only the final stage engine should have the capacity to trigger the parachute.
(This is going off what 12 year old me knew 23 years ago, so maybe trust but verify?)
Nice to see Estes is still the goto for model rockets. I got into model rockets at age 10, in 1968. The Apollo program was in full swing, and every kid in my class could rattle off the names of every Astronaut. By age 11 I was doing multi-stage rockets, just like the real astronauts. For Apollo 11, my parents bought us kids a telescope, and the night that Neal Armstrong set foot on the moon surface the whole neighborhood gathered at our rocket launch pad. All the kids took turns looking at the moon, trying to see the astronauts walking around up there. The entire world understood that history was being made that night. It was quiet and serene.
Years later I majored in engineering, I think my playing around with model rockets had an influence on that. Understanding safety protocols, following directions to the letter, putting together a complex rocket with multiple stages and a parachute deployment, studying wind direction and velocity. It got my 10 y/o mind working.
You guys are very good Dads.
Fun fact: Model rockets use a bit of ‘black powder’ in the engine. When the only black powder plant in America closed, Estes ended up purchasing and re-opening it. So now they’re a model rocket company as well as a defense industry supplier.