What did you buy today?
I had two RC's, both from Tamiya. Both were 1/10 scale and one had a Skyline body and one had a Subaru body. Both were Nitro powered.
The Subaru started off innocently enough, an RTR (ready to run) straight out the box, primed the engine, broke it in, had fun with it's .12 motor.
The Skyline had to be built. As such, I had fun. Started out with a .12 and a single-speed transmission. Stepped up to a .15 and a 2-speed transmission.
Then I put the .18 engine on it, LMAO! THat's when things got expensive.
At this point I had spent . . .roughly 500 dollars on top of the 600 dollar body. I then went with all carbon-fiber body and frame pieces for weight, a 3-speed transmission, .21 motor and set it free. It DESTROYED every drivetrain bit, other than the tranny.
I went out and purchased ALL titanium pieces and ran a kevlar clutch . . .I had to take out the standard rubberish belt that powered the front wheels and ran with a carbon-kevlar belt system. Good stuff, a ***** to install . . .
All said and done, the Skyline had about 1200 bucks of aftermarket parts, and that's on top of the 600 dollar purchase price of the car itself. Mind you, I wasn't just in the barracks all day, I had my sideways fun and spent my money (or wanted to) elsewhere. . . it's just something that once you fall into the trap. . . you're stuck . . .the only way to fall OUT of it . . .is to quit cold turkey, LOL!
-Dave
PS: The Subaru go the .15 motor, then the .18 after the Skyline got the .21 . . .it ran for about 2 hours, then destroyed the factory single-speed transmission . . .I sold it as is with the .12, .15 and .18 and put that money into the Skyline . . .
hahahah
yea man that is what happen to my guys... they all are about to psc so they dont have a real drift car anymore lol.
Im already about to upgrade my engine to a 19T.. the stock one sucks.. Im about to weld the diff also. My car was used for grip and had a Open Diff.
yea man that is what happen to my guys... they all are about to psc so they dont have a real drift car anymore lol.
Im already about to upgrade my engine to a 19T.. the stock one sucks.. Im about to weld the diff also. My car was used for grip and had a Open Diff.
not just yet, but i am getting closers. but seriously though i never planed to buy so many guns. initially i just wanted one to carry and a shotgun to have at home. the .22s for practice and just having fun.
I enjoy the purchase and sale of firearms, it's fun to me.
I'm also a US Marine so I can look at firearms from two lights.
1. The protection (or sense of protection as studies have proven that most homeowners who die in an intrusion die from their OWN firearms) of owning one. Also the fun of going to the range and blasting targets in a tighter group than the Civilian or Police Officer next to me.
2. I also enjoy the form-factor of firearms. If you think about it, the beautiful lines and contours of a Beretta. The triple-buffer-springs of a Desert Eagle, the absorption buffers of a CZ .40 or Bersa. These weapons have a LOT of detail applied to them and it shows. Whether you're just admiring them externally, or you break them down bit by bit and see just how close each and every tolerance is to allow for maximum muzzle velocity, increased accuracy, devoted stopping power and masterful use of limited-recoil.
Don't even get me started on the rugged elegance of the Glock, Glock C, Glock L and Glock Compensated line up . . . .mmmmmmmm
I'm also a US Marine so I can look at firearms from two lights.
1. The protection (or sense of protection as studies have proven that most homeowners who die in an intrusion die from their OWN firearms) of owning one. Also the fun of going to the range and blasting targets in a tighter group than the Civilian or Police Officer next to me.
2. I also enjoy the form-factor of firearms. If you think about it, the beautiful lines and contours of a Beretta. The triple-buffer-springs of a Desert Eagle, the absorption buffers of a CZ .40 or Bersa. These weapons have a LOT of detail applied to them and it shows. Whether you're just admiring them externally, or you break them down bit by bit and see just how close each and every tolerance is to allow for maximum muzzle velocity, increased accuracy, devoted stopping power and masterful use of limited-recoil.
Don't even get me started on the rugged elegance of the Glock, Glock C, Glock L and Glock Compensated line up . . . .mmmmmmmm
i also agree about the beauty of many firearms, but i have to disagree about the glocks. sure they are great guns and what not, i just don't like the look.
here's the love of my life
Last edited by jramosthe1st!; Dec 15, 2009 at 09:01 AM.
That is a beauty . . .but come on man . . .Glock's not pretty?
It's like the E60 5 series BMW's . . .at first, everyone was like . . .bleh . . .then it grew on em . . .fire a Glock . . .hold it, see how it fits in a holster, see how it fits in your hand, how you can squeeze with zero increased resistance. It's like a cable-clutch, steady force the whole way.
and then there's the "cool" factor:

It's like the E60 5 series BMW's . . .at first, everyone was like . . .bleh . . .then it grew on em . . .fire a Glock . . .hold it, see how it fits in a holster, see how it fits in your hand, how you can squeeze with zero increased resistance. It's like a cable-clutch, steady force the whole way.
and then there's the "cool" factor:

Last edited by USMCDrifter; Dec 15, 2009 at 09:20 AM.



