|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
low cost drift tires
heres a tut i borrowed from Murdoch(thanks)
find some tires that you don't mind painting find or buy nail polish spare driveshaft 1 take your tire and mount it, then put it on the driveshaft 2 coat the tire in an even coat of nail ppolish 3 find an extra wheel to prop up the driveshaft 4 let it cure and paint on another coat 5 repeat to all four wheels/tires in the end your tire will be very slick, and depending on the tire softness, it can vary in grip i made some myself with hard slicks, and it slides with a lot better control than with the rs drift kit the nail polish can probably make 20 or more sets of drift tires at ~$10 a bottle ps. sorry i don't have pics
__________________
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Nice tut. Pics would be nice for those members who like visuals
You can also do something similar with CA (cyanoacrylate, krazy glue, superglue, w/e). But it produces a similar grip characteristic to the stock drift kit tires. |
#3
|
||||
|
||||
I just bought pvc pipping and cut them to size. Im going to have to trim the body a bit though...so im using beater bodies to drift with. The nailpolish is a good idea though. I didnt even think about that
__________________
Real Car: Honda S2000 A-tech XMT4 Tamiya TL-01 Tamiya TA-02 Traxxas Hawk 2 Last edited by Azngtboi88; 03-20-2007 at 12:53 PM.. |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
yeah i've done that, it works...just dont use soft slicks..then u go out of control with a stage 2 motor and RWD
__________________
Helpful Warnings: "CAUTION: Knife is very sharp. Keep out of children" ^ i got that from a box of kitchen knifes at IKEA aka DJ KraZe |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|