by waaytoomuchintothis » Sun Mar 01, 2015 3:58 pm
I suspected you would respond, so I waited for you. To each of the points below, I have responded, too, giving you suggestions to help you solve the mysteries you mention.
1/ “the body doesn't fit the wheels on the chassisâ€
We have made over 4,500 Camaro models. I have to argue against your findings. If the body did not fit this would have been apparent 2 years ago. ---I suspect that the rub against the fender was from the tires' that didn't fit the wheels. As is shown in the photo, the tires, particularly the fronts, were "cupped", because the sidewalls were too tall. I could have turned them down on a tire sander, but a simple swap to other Pioneer tires from one of my Mustangs solved it. The replacement wheel/axle units bought separately, with the spare Pioneer tires I had on hand ended the rub without the need to sand the inside of the fender, thank goodness. Not only are they too pretty to take a chance on, they are very thin, making it more risky than in other situations.
2/ “related to the above directly, the wheels are slammed so hard against the chassis that they won't turn.â€
My reply would be the same as in point (1) ---What can I tell you? Until I released the pressure, they were hard against the chassis. This was observed after removing the body to make sure the body rub against the tires wasn't the entire issue.
4/ “the tires don't fit the wheels.â€
I really don’t know how you come to this conclusion. The wheel and tire size are exactly as they have been for many years. ---addressed above, tires higher on the edge than the middle of the tread. The rib on the wheels couldn't support the center of the tread, hence, "cupping".
5/ “the chassis to body screws were cranked so hard the plastic actually popped when each of them finally broke loose and unscrewed. Of course, this served to make the tire rub and the chassis warpage worse.â€
There is no way those body screws should be as tight as you indicate. Just enough, so that the posts meet the chassis and hold it firm. --- It is a problem that is not uncommon in RTR cars. I was surprised these particular ones didn't strip, being that tight. They were all uniformly tight, incidentally. Could there have been a heat/friction issue in the installation? Driving a screw too fast, or driving a screw into slightly warm plastic can make a powerful glue bond on the threads.
6/ “the mounting screw on the plinth display case was overtorqued so badly that the chassis is warped.â€
The models are attached to the plinth base by a tiny little person who should not have the grip of a gorilla. This is a mystery. ---see above. I was also surprised to see that the usual spacer between the chassis and the plinth was not there to keep the tires from being pressed against the plinth in shipping. I don't think I have ever seen that spacer left out before. As I mentioned more than once, it isn't a big issue to need to shape up tires on a RTR car, so the very slight flat spotting wasn't worth mentioning until now.
7/â€the "legs" under the seats protrude so far that the already warped chassis is also torqued in two directions on the opposite axis from the mounting screw torque.â€
I think you may be referring to the disused screw posts where we used to fix into the interior floor. These posts will be removed in the tooling later this year. They are not required. Nevertheless, I am unsure of what they are getting in the way of. --- At the time, I thought they must have been in the way when the mounting screws for the body were so very tight, but I really couldn't tell because the chassis was out of shape there and longitudinally. Of course a few minutes in hot water solved the warpage, which can only mean the part itself was almost sure to have been fine until assembly and mounting to the plinth took place. The plastic has "memory" and it was flat in no time at all. I sanded the posts off just to be sure. Harry took the rails off, too. I should do that.
While I have you here, why do some of the spur gears bind? It has happened twice with Pioneer replacement axles I have used to change the color of the wheels on cars I painted. Its simple to shim the motor and fix it, but I wonder how it happens, when so many of them (speaking only of Pioneer parts), simply don't have the problem, or anything even close to that problem.