MelvinsArmy wrote: Go to the vintage nats and watch bngiles race his "basher" Frog around the track as fast as a modified RC10. Yes, there are plenty of shelf queens, but there are also plenty of serious competitors.
I was around when the first Goldtubs hit the track --- and literally overnight the Frogs got retired. Sure there was a couple of guys that continued to campaign them, and dropped a main each succeeding month, until their full-race versions languished in the F-main (we used to call it the Frog-Main because it was full of 'em

)
MelvinsArmy wrote:Hardly any of the parts on this truck were developed for racing, it's based on a Clodbuster, the ultimate basher. The only parts developed for racing would be the TTR CVD's and ball diffs (both totally unnecessary for what I'm using it for) and Trinity motors. I don't think anybody is racing a steel tube John Boyer chassis, although I could be wrong. Nobody would race JPS gear boxes, and the shocks are from a Revo. I've never seen aluminum wheels on a racer. Most race Clods don't use cantilever suspension like on my truck either. Yes, it performs much, much better than a stock Clod, but it weighs about twice as much as a race truck, so it would not be competitive on the track.
I was also around when the Clod came out -- and out of the box it was all but the biggest, most complicated build, POS in the history of RC. Everyone was laughing wondering if it was going to be the King of Plastic's (Tamiya) downfall. All of the upgrade parts were either designed to keep it from self-exploding and/or racing/truck-pulling (which was about all they were used for initially). There's a healthy contingent that compete each year at the IMTRA (sp?) Worlds each year, and they use all sorts of goodies,
Great basher, sure, once you replace just about everything.
MelvinsArmy wrote:There was a hobby before there was racing. You have to have a vehicle before you can have a track. You don't build Daytona and then start a company called Ford. There will always be a r/c hobby, if it's on the track or not. I don't think racing has ever been responsible for the biggest percentage of r/c consumers, I don't think it ever will be.
RC as a hobby came directly from the early 1/8th scale gas cars....... i.e. racing.
RC as a basher pursuit came directly from RadioShack.
Electric RC as a hobby came first from the early Tamiya cars, that weren't very durable or racable (without a lot of help from HotTrick and CRP) and without parts to make them raceworthy there would have been no reason for a hobby ---
--- but the hobby really jumped to the forefront in this country after Associated
got into the game with the first RC12e's and the Goldtub RC10.....
I can't say for sure about Kyosho, but I feel pretty confident that I can state for a fact that if it wasn't for RACING --
Associated Engineering, and definately Team Losi would never have been entities in the hobby.
..... and I don't recall a Frog ever making the podium at the World or the Nats.