I’m pretty intrigued with getting a scale remote control trail
truck, but budget priorities don’t allow for it right now. I still want to explore the scene, and give
our readers and YouTube viewers a chance to see what something other than a
trail truck looks and acts like on the trail.
For this I used what many have a short coarse truck. I used a stock Traxxas Slash 2WD, a monster
truck would be better, but I wanted have a bit more of a challenge. One of the complaints about the Slash is its
high center of gravity with the standard chassis. This is true on a track, but for general
bashing and running around outdoors it is a plus. Still for running on the trail the ground
clearance is still not that great and the wide chassis is going to get into
contact with everything, unlike the chassis on a trail truck. However, this exercise isn’t about modifying the
hell out of a Slash to turn it into a capable trail truck, it is about simply
getting out and having fun on limited resources.
The trail I was running was flat to rolling hills and had
blanket of leaves. It had no big gullies,
massive roots, or rocks to climb. A short course truck is not for technical
crawling and will just lead to frustration if you try to do that. The slash ran just fine trough the wet fall
leaves without any trouble. Although the
leaves gave me almost no traction at the parking lot. My biggest problem was running across
sticks. Small sticks often got wedged in
the chassis and I had to drag them along.
The chassis would run up on higher sticks and give enough lift of the
wheels to lose traction and just spin.
The Traxxas Slash handled small roots just fine. Overall I enjoyed running the slash on the
trail although; I have to admit it looked pretty dumb compared to scale jeeps
and pickup trucks.
Well I think I’ve been bitten by the scale trail truck bug
and I’ll have to start saving my pennies.
I think the object of my desire is an Axial ACX10 Jeep of some
sort.
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