by HomeRacingWorld » Wed Nov 14, 2018 4:13 pm
Let me try and reword/repeat. I'm long winded though so...
Try and forget ratios for this part. Think physical size. Like outer diameter, etc.
Sometimes it is not the ratio. It is what will FIT inside the car/chassis. Such as gears in some models like SCX F1 that use smaller than 27 tooth because the crown is simply smaller in diameter and fits.
Or a spur gear in sidewinder/anglewinder. You just cannot have too large a diameter given the pitch we are working with. Think Monogram NASCAR. The spur gear almost drags the track in stock form, so don't sand the tires too much. The tire/wheel basically says: "That is far enough".
On pitch. Might be a few protestors on this one, but our common RTR gears are right around 50. In between 48 to 52. We say pitch, but these gears are actually a metric standard. And you can only stretch/shrink the gap so far while restricting diameters before you get a "mesh" that sounds like nails in a blender. REMEMBER...I'm talking our Euro RTR models here. Not the commercial/vintage offerings ok?
And when face with a "fixed" inline, where the motor shaft rests between the teeth and the "boss" or flange...you are limited even more.
Now with this in place, what about HOW the cars act/perform in SETS. Not all of us have Walmart sized, 8 lane Euro tracks. The cars have to run well in the smaller sets they are placed in.
And there are some ratios than can cause our little China/Japanese automotive/industrial born motors to over heat. Might seem trivial...but it's not.
And one final tidbit...how does the car SOUND? Is it quiet and smooth? Or that bag of nails in a blender? What would YOU prefer your end product to sound like to customers?
So a standard ratio was started as a baseline that fit most restrictions and parameters. Maybe it was because of performance. MAYBE it was because the gears already existed thanks to automakers/industry already investing in the tooling? Because...so we are clear...our motors (Mabuchi, etc) are directly from them. Those little square holes in some of our cans are NOT for cooling ok? They are for the adapters that snap to them for side mirrors, wipers, etc.
One must admit that a 9/27 ratio works well for many small to medium tracks with low excess heat. Even my 5x16 oval proves that. Still the hot setup. 11/36? Yep. Spur gear almost small enough in diameter to fit a very wide variety of cars. Given the distance the motor is placed in the chassis and is not easily adjustable.
Compatibility. You need to know, if not already...they don't care. If compatibility were priority, NINCO would not have changed motors every other release. One of the reasons they are a dead player today because the people that keep changing things never raced.
Today is a different. We have all the parts and availability to create compatibility, to some degree.
Now don't get too mad....but in my opinion any club/track/race organizer who mandates STOCK ratio only, well...only has themselves to blame. Not the manufacturer. Why do this and then expect the cars to be equal? Won't happen. What WILL and DOES happen is racers gravitate to the car/setup that is dominant...and thus you lose the variety you were striving for.
Mixing configurations without the "permission" to tune is simply a waste of time. It cannot be about money. We spend oodles on parts and tuning. Especially the advanced racers around these parts.
Rules are made by the people. So I would open things up a bit and allow the racers to experiment with ratios. I mean, don't we all want to mimic 1:1 racing these days? Increased scale accuracy...better lane and track design flow...etc? If that were the case, then allowing gear ratio changes should be the norm...not the exception?
Ok your turn!