Michael217 Posted June 2 Posted June 2 (edited) Welcome to my garage LEGO!!! Hello! My name is Michael. I'm a Builder from Russia, I love muscle cars! Hello everyone I'm back with a new muscle car. 2008 Dodge Charger, large family sedan) The model turned out to be one of the most difficult. The front suspension arms are positioned equidistant from each other relative to the body, and the front subframe is offset horizontally by half a pin so that the wheels fit well into the arches, in addition, the body itself is also offset by half a pin vertically from the frame. Also, because of the shape of the rear doors, in order for them to open freely, the rear arches had to be lowered onto half of the tiles, and they pulled the entire body line behind them, so the doors also have 2 tile inserts. The geekserva helped a lot to save space under the hood, which allowed the V8 to be installed, it can be turned off with the gear lever to remove the extra load from the buggy motor. Another difficulty awaited me when assembling the rear suspension, it turns out that it is not so easy to make an independent 62-wheel drive. In a couple of evenings, I figured out a fairly reliable system on the prefabricated hubs, the wheels do not play, the suspension works well. Description: -Geekservo on the steering wheel -Drive the buggy motor, rear-wheel drive -RCBric Management -Hood,trunk lid and all doors open -A working V8 -Enabling, disabling V8 -The steering wheel turns with the wheels -Detailed interior -Independent suspension -Weight: 2.5kg Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lego_muscle_garage/ Join my group in VK: https://vk.com/legomusclegarage More photos: Edited June 2 by Michael217 Quote
2GodBDGlory Posted June 3 Posted June 3 Great job! I've probably said it before, but I always love seeing models that have both very good aesthetics and good performance Quote
Krxlion Posted June 3 Posted June 3 The model looks gorgeous. Full of details, and neat solutions, such as this front axle. I can see that you describe your power solution as "RCBric Management", could you describe it a little bit more (with screenshots - if possible). Because I wonder what is your solution to connect Lego motors with geekservo. Is this some kind of brushed ESC in nice 3d-printed case? Quote
gyenesvi Posted June 3 Posted June 3 Oh my.. That is beautiful, and very functional / playable at the same time! Really nice shaping all around, and efficient motorization, with a good resulting speed. It just show how much potential is left on the table by Lego electronics. 2 hours ago, Krxlion said: I can see that you describe your power solution as "RCBric Management", could you describe it a little bit more (with screenshots - if possible). Because I wonder what is your solution to connect Lego motors with geekservo. Is this some kind of brushed ESC in nice 3d-printed case? RC Brick used to be a 3rd party product by some russian maker, but it was never really sold outside of russia, apart from a few pieces I guess. It's basically a small box with an ESC in it and you can connect your receiver to it from the bottom. It has two PF ports on the top (channels 1 and 2) and the steering channel also has a standard servo output on the side. It would be a handy product.. Quote
Michael217 Posted June 3 Author Posted June 3 8 hours ago, Krxlion said: I can see that you describe your power solution as "RCBric Management", could you describe it a little bit more (with screenshots - if possible). Because I wonder what is your solution to connect Lego motors with geekservo. Is this some kind of brushed ESC in nice 3d-printed case? Hi, as gyenesvi replied to you, this is a device from a Russian enthusiast, it stopped production about 2 years ago. Yes, this is a box printed on a 3d printer, a standard receiver is connected to it. You can also install a Lego Servo + The motor and at the same time GeekServo. Quote
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