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i want sau track pants!!! how good! we can have tracksuits!! wot

Haha maybe taking it a little too far :D haha.

It will be great, hell easy to recognise people with them on, start up a lil chat :D

Oh and brand change sounds good, especially if they are better quality.

Great work :ermm:

my gf got me an rc car for xmas last year

its so cool :thumbsup: she had doyles paint it my colour and put volk gt-cs on it haha

she knew a guy from hobby habit so she got it at a good price aswell

but then when she used it she managed to make it flip up a kerb, it still works though

A good price from Hobby Habit? Unheard of...

I remember I was grip racing one of my other chassis' and the battery wasn't held in properly, so it was moving about, transferring the weight, and flipped it on a perfectly flat surface, rolled/fly about 5m and the battery went further.

I broke the battery holder on my drifter, hit a secured plank of wood head on.

They go fast with road tires.

So reppin SAU hoodie at Hobby Habit when I get it lol.

Bad news guys, the outlet where we are getting the hoodies done has had a fire overnight, i found out by phone call this morning. I will look at refunding everyone's money as soon as i can. Thanks guys :)

Just kidding ;)

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    • Yeah. I believe the fear of annealing the alloy and weakening it, Every online discussion has someone saying it's bad and potentially a risk when powder coating forged wheels.  
    • I'm interested if anyone agrees with what you've said, and can give a good reason. Temperature of powder coating should be below any temperature you'd use to alter the wheel structure.  Powder coat typically 200 to 250. Annealing if that's what people are claiming would be occuring, starts at 300, and depending on the alloy, can need even up at 400+.   That's the only part I can think of that could cause an issue that people are believing it's from the rim losing hardness and becoming too soft.
    • Negative probe should be on the cars chassis. Positive on the wire.   Start as said above by unplugging everything (unplug the lights, and switches. Now at the switch, there is a wire from the fuse, to the switch, so out your positive on that terminal. It should read open circuit. If it reads something, especially a stupid low value, the short is somewhere between the fuse and the switch. If that's fine, now put the positive probe on the wire that goes to the headlight (at the switch plug). If it reads stupid low, the fault is from the switch, to the headlight.   Another quick test, is take the whole LED light setup from the left, and plug it into the right side, does it still blow the fuse? If you put the right hand side led light setup on the left hand side wiring, does the left hand side wiring now blow?  If the blowing fuse swaps from right to left doing this, your LED lights are the issue.
    • Anyone know if it's a problem to powder coat forged alloy wheel centers (Rays/Volk GT-C). some say it's bad and can damage the alloy, some say it's not a problem.
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