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The Project
Stampede
The Project
Stampede Tri-Pede Three Wheeled Stampede |
CONVENIENCE Easy-Pull Body Clips -
Although I would love to take the credit for this "palm to the
forehead"/"why didn't I think of that" idea, the credit
belongs to Misbehavin-RC.com. Unless you have the fingers of a
hobbit and dexterity of a surgeon, you will grow very VERY tired of
pulling the body clips on and off. The genius at Misbehavin-RC.com
came up with a great solution that I am personally thankful for. See
it here Battery Strap - Another
great idea from Misbehavin-RC.com,
but I think my implementation is a little cleaner, do to the fact that I
used a fancy Velco wire tie which are designed for pretty much this
exact purpose and take a little more abuse than regular Velcro.
Additionally, instead of drilling holes for mounting, I used the battery
hold down posts and body clips to secure the battery strap. The
Misbehavin-RC article. This does require cutting/modifying the
front battery/receiver holder. The back of the battery toes into the
rear as usual, but simply requires a quick tug on the industrial Velcro
to release the battery. Very secure, survived LOTs of crashes.
This is sooo much easier than un-clipping that hole receiver mess up
front every time you need to change the battery. Railing Tie Downs - I
wanted to clean up all the wires running the length
of the chassis so they didn't get in the way or damaged. I have seen a
lot of people drill holes in the chassis and secure all the wires with
small zip ties, but I am not a big fan of cutting holes. Although the
Stampede chassis is way over-designed and could loose some weight, I
tend to favor a less invasive route. What I used to accomplish the same
task was to use the hard stock wire plugs used in the Floppy Antenna Fix - After flipping your Stampede a couple of times you will start to notice that the extra 2-4" of antenna wire flopping around and hanging out of the antenna rod is taking quite a beating. Sooner or later if you don't secure it it will get ground off and you will have to replace your antenna. One easy fix is to spiral it down the rod and use a piece of electrical heat shrink to secure it. Due to my mission of durability, I heat shrinked the the last 8 inches of my antenna. Multi-Compartment Box -
Nothing more irritating than looking for a part you swear you have, but
can't find. You probably now have between three to ten zip lock bags
full of parts. Organize all your crap and buy a couple of clear
multi-compartment storage boxes with the separators you can move around
to divide up the box. They run about $2-$5 in various sizes, and
you Twisting the Wire - This is a lot easier than it looks for ESC and receiver wires. Use this when your want to allow a little flexibility and give should you need the extra wire. It also cleans up everything and make floppy wires look neat. Start twisting the wire as you would around a pencil and it just works.
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