by walker » Sun Jan 27, 2019 5:39 am
It has nothing to do with soldering together, Aki. The tubing of this dia. is stiff enough to even withstand the forces of an old, heavy and strong C - can 26 AWG race motor. In 24th scale cars. With an old, heavy chassis made from brass.
So in a 43rd scale chassis
- that is about half as big in size
- much less weight
- whose levers are corresponding short and
- whose motors are totally weak compared to bigger scale motors
it is the softness and elasticity of the printed parts that are the weak point, by no means these short pieces of tubing.
Even if you crash a chassis without body frontally into the banking of your track you will not bend or break the brass parts.
Roughen the tubings, use a good 2k glue ( JB Weld for example ) and glue together the plastic parts and the tubings. So you prevent any torsion and get a really stiff and tough chassis.
I make my chassis - among other - from 1mm two - sided copper PCB and don´t have any problems, and when I use brass tubings lengthwise in a chassis ( in 43rd scale cars of course ), they are max. 1.5 mm dia.
Regards,
Roland.
And thanks for the pictures and the PM !