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-   -   How longs it taking you to build your 22? (http://www.oople.com/forums/showthread.php?t=66256)

wacattack 24-03-2011 08:48 AM

How longs it taking you to build your 22?
 
I got mine last night and want to try and race it at Worksop on Sunday, however I only spent half an hour building it last night, have some of tonight free, at a wedding tomorrow so wont get back to Leeds until Saturday afternoon then Im going out on Saturday night. Do I have enought time??? :)

reg 24-03-2011 08:57 AM

my first took about 10 hours..............my second took about 7 hours:thumbsup:

Tom3012 24-03-2011 09:03 AM

Took me 4.5 hours ;)

Legacy555 24-03-2011 09:06 AM

If you going to rinse out the bearings, check ballstud tolerances, run in the gearbox, tap all necessary holes, ream all of the hinge pin paths, drill pistons and prep each piece - remove flashing and tidy up, and of course, cut and paint the body..... you'll need an absolute minimum of 12 hours - I prefer to do it over 3 or 4 evenings.

wacattack 24-03-2011 09:32 AM

Hmm, I like to do it properly so this weekend might be out of the question

reg 24-03-2011 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wacattack (Post 479343)
Hmm, I like to do it properly so this weekend might be out of the question


iv built mine properly.............just not anally:p:woot:

Dudders 24-03-2011 10:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Legacy555 (Post 479333)
If you going to rinse out the bearings, check ballstud tolerances, run in the gearbox, tap all necessary holes, ream all of the hinge pin paths, drill pistons and prep each piece - remove flashing and tidy up, and of course, cut and paint the body..... you'll need an absolute minimum of 12 hours - I prefer to do it over 3 or 4 evenings.

That's a lot of work to bui;d a kit :cry: Is that down to the quality?:confused:

Tom3012 24-03-2011 10:27 AM

Mine went together like a dream, no flash to remove or anything like that...

Only difficult bit was the turnbuckles

Legacy555 24-03-2011 10:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom3012 (Post 479374)
Mine went together like a dream, no flash to remove or anything like that...

Only difficult bit was the turnbuckles

Sorry, forgot to meantion turnbuckles. If you take a M3 x 20 screw and cut a slot up the length of it with the dremel (making a tap as such) and then use this to thread all of the ball cups. Use a bit of GT85 or WD40 on the turnbuckle as you thread it in for the first time.

If you do this, you will find that adjustment is really easy when on the car yet not sloppy or loose, and there it becomes alot more difficult to over tighted the rod into the ball cup causing yielding in the head and usually failure.

Takes the guts of a hour on its own.
Sorry for sounding a bit OTT, but if it's built right it'll perform better.

J.Kirkman 24-03-2011 10:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Legacy555 (Post 479378)
Sorry, forgot to meantion turnbuckles. If you take a M3 x 20 screw and cut a slot up the length of it with the dremel (making a tap as such) and then use this to thread all of the ball cups. Use a bit of GT85 or WD40 on the turnbuckle as you thread it in for the first time.

If you do this, you will find that adjustment is really easy when on the car yet not sloppy or loose, and there it becomes alot more difficult to over tighted the rod into the ball cup causing yielding in the head and usually failure.

Takes the guts of a hour on its own.
Sorry for sounding a bit OTT, but if it's built right it'll perform better.


You can only do this for half the ball cups. The thread is reversed on the other side so you would need a screw with a left handed thread. Telling people to do them all could result in many wrecked ball cups!

Legacy555 24-03-2011 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by J.Kirkman (Post 479385)
You can only do this for half the ball cups. The thread is reversed on the other side so you would need a screw with a left handed thread. Telling people to do them all could result in many wrecked ball cups!

Good shout, sorry folks. You can get lht M3 taps easily enough. Got mine from screwfix
You can cut a spare 3mm turnbuckle to do this also

coleman758 24-03-2011 01:04 PM

I got some good old mole grips and a small G clamp and my turnbuckles were done in about 10-15 mins. It was hard to get them to bite but i just opend them up with a reamer.

Legacy555 24-03-2011 01:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by coleman758 (Post 479445)
I got some good old mole grips and a small G clamp and my turnbuckles were done in about 10-15 mins. It was hard to get them to bite but i just opend them up with a reamer.

Thats fair enough - nice and quick and to the point. You could lock the ball cup into a vice and beat the turnbuckle in with a lump hammer which would be even quicker.

But it you want the turnbuckles to be easy to adjust you will have to remove the "cut" material that is created by the threading process. You really should tap the ballcups first.

wacattack 24-03-2011 11:16 PM

That was faster than I thought. 5 hours in total and jobs a good en

Timee80 24-03-2011 11:39 PM

Mine took about 11 hrs over 3 evenings (not including the shell). This seems to be about average for me on most buggies ive built. I really dont see how anybody can build a buggy which they are not familiar with to a high standard, checking that everything is spot on along the way.
Im not knocking anyone who does it quicker, im just amazed really. Or maybe im just getting old and things take me longer :confused:

mole2k 25-03-2011 06:38 PM

Mines still in the box so I've no idea how long it'll take me. I would imagine around the 10-12hrs that Will was talking about to do it.

Somerwil 01-04-2011 04:15 PM

It depends on the number of wrenches you have in stock. You'll need a new one every 5 screws or so. :thumbdown:

Tom3012 01-04-2011 04:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Somerwil (Post 484475)
It depends on the number of wrenches you have in stock. You'll need a new one every 5 screws or so. :thumbdown:

:confused:

wacattack 01-04-2011 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Somerwil (Post 484475)
It depends on the number of wrenches you have in stock. You'll need a new one every 5 screws or so. :thumbdown:

Huh?? :confused:

ian h 01-04-2011 04:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Somerwil (Post 484475)
It depends on the number of wrenches you have in stock. You'll need a new one every 5 screws or so. :thumbdown:

Tap out threads first.:thumbsup:

Culetto 01-04-2011 09:30 PM

Took me 3 hours to build the chassis the first night, maybe another 4 hours the second night finishing the shocks, mounting tires, painting, installing electronics, adjusting trims and sorting the base tuning setup. Just generally all the little stuff before you can actually drop it on the track. Probably 6-8 hours from opening the box to putting it on the track for a shakedown.

RookieBOB 01-04-2011 10:04 PM

55 sec:woot::
http://img860.imageshack.us/i/ug0.mp4/

Sorry for the poor quality, I will do better with the second one !

Kommando98 02-04-2011 05:09 AM

Took me about 6 hours total.

slowjun 15-04-2011 08:13 AM

is it that long, 7 -10 - 11 hours (less body), my 410 took me only 4-5 hours (less body), and that is a 4wd buggy and had a 23 years break from rc building.

Does this mean that the 22 is not that precision engineered that you need to do some mods for it to be snug fit?

how true? been hearing some problems on the Diff nut slipping, tie rods, etc..... whats with the 22? maybe its called 22 coz you need to build it 22 hours......

Wacker 2 15-04-2011 09:01 AM

It might take u 22 hours to build if ur trying to build it with a flat headed screwdriver!!! Not sure what u were doing but if it took u that long id suggest it was ur building skills and not the kit!!! Bad workman blaming his tools and all that!

I've had no mods to do on my 22 whatsoever... Flew together and was a really well thought out and very well engineered car... Strong too!

Anyways... Stop moaning... Uve built it now so just enjoy driving it :thumbsup:


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