TT-01

Author
Discussion

largerandrock

Original Poster:

652 posts

205 months

Wednesday 12th November 2008
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Looking at buying one of these just to mess about with, I dont have any idea about this kind of thing so any help in what to buy would be great!!thumbup

The_Jackal

4,854 posts

198 months

Wednesday 12th November 2008
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Just take your pick from any of the new TT-01E models as they have been upgraded.

dundarach

5,123 posts

229 months

Wednesday 12th November 2008
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can't go wrong, they are quite simple and a bit entry level but good fun for messing around with, plus loads of upgrades etc on ebay...



appologies for the basic paint job, but didn't want it all chavved up wink

Roop

6,012 posts

285 months

Wednesday 19th November 2008
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The Tamiya TT-01 chassis is a great entry level on-road chassis. It's a real 'Marmite' chassis in that people either love it or hate it. Having bought and run one of the earliest TT-01 models, I can offer some advice.

Don't spend a fortune on upgrades - it's a complete waste on such a car. The following comprises everything you will need to have a good TT-01 chassis specification that will be great as a 'basher' car for messing around or entry-level club racing:

- Full ballrace bearing kit (an absolute must, even in standard form).
- Alloy propeller shaft (an absolute must, even in standard form).
- Oil shocks (plastic bodied Tamiya oil shocks are fine).
- Gearing to suit the motor in the car (feel free to PM me on this).

If you plan to race the car then I also recommend the following:

- Toe-in rear uprights.
- Higher speed servo.
- Metal motor mount.

Don't be deterred by people criticising your choice of a very cheap car. Provided you don't blow £'s on it to turn it into something it was never intended to be, it can be a giant killer in the right hands. One thing that most people don't realise about r/c is that at club level, 90% of a car's ability is the driver. The remaining 10% is split into tyre preparation (5%), Chassis (2.5%) and setup (2.5%).

When I first started competitive racing at the beginning of 2008, I was led to believe that you needed £400 carbon fibre specials with all the latest gear to be competitive. I thought that was cack and to prove a point, I took my very well used, very beaten up TT-01 racing. Bone stock bar what I have mentioned above. I even ran the standard Nissan 350Z body and not a racing Hot Bodies orMazdaspeed in sight. Lo and behold in our spec class (fixed motor, tyres and battery types) I wiped the floor with cars worth 10x what mine was. Top qualifier and overall class winner. Point proven and embarrassed faces all round, I was politely asked not to race it in the stock class again.

Great starter car IMHO. Agree with the above - go for the slightly newer and better TT-01E based cars. Small premium to pay bit it's improved in some key areas.

vdubbin

2,165 posts

198 months

Monday 24th November 2008
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I've two, one was my racer when I started, the other was set up for drifting. Good learner's car, not the most competitive racing, but great fun to get slideways!