Yes, that is about right. 1900 for Medium U.S. Tracks. 1700 or 1900 for small indoor tracks (1700 if running on a small 1/10th indoor track) and 2050 for large sweeping euro tracks. You might be able to get a 1900 and gear up for large tracks. Gearing down a 2050 for a small track will generate too many rpms still and possibly excess wheel spin with all that torque. Guys who run 2050 on small/med U.S. tracks always drop lap times when they go to 1900kv because they are not fighting the massive rpms and torque. But, if you are going to run large tracks in Europe the majority of the time 2050 will feel much better.
Do you guys run 1/8th buggies in the rain? That sounds fun! Carpet I take it, or do you play in the mud?
|