TEST VENUE: R/C Madness, Enfield, CT
SURFACE: Indoor Ozite carpet roadcourse
STEERING
Understeer Neutral
Oversteer
COMMENTS: I found that fully coating the rear tires and
just the inside of the front tires with Paragon Ground
Effects tire traction compound worked well; this gave
the Scalpel just enough steering, and kept it from
feeling twitchy. “Responsive” is quite an
understatement when it comes to the Scalpel. It took
some getting used to for the first few laps, as once I
got the feel for the car, and had the tweak properly
adjusted, the Scalpel was running very smoothly and I
was throwing down some quick and consistent laps.
BRAKING
Poor Fair Good Excellent
COMMENTS: Rear-wheel-drive cars are traditionally
poor at braking, but thanks to the wide, blue-dot rear
foam tires, I could really dip into the Novak Micro GT
ESC’s brakes without causing the rear end to slide.
ACCELERATION
Poor Fair Good
Excellent
COMMENTS: As it runs off only four cells, I did not
expect the Scalpel to be all that quick with the stock
motor, but I was pleasantly surprised after a few laps.
Because the Scalpel is so light—it weighs less than a
pound—it is very quick off the line and gets up to
full speed in no time. Coming out of the corners, it
snapped up to speed smoothly and quickly.
SUSPENSION
Poor Fair Good
Excellent
COMMENTS: The front suspension works well, and is easily
adjusted with droop screws or thumbscrews to increase
tension on the front springs. The rear T-plate is a bit
fragile, and the spring loaded center shock would
operate more smoothly if it was damped somehow, like a
micro VCS shock.
DURABILITY
Poor Fair Good
Excellent
COMMENTS: You can’t go this fast and expect nothing to
fail, but for the most part the Photon took all the
punishment I threw at it and asked for more. I was very
surprised that only a plastic right front C-hub broke
after hitting a cement sidewalk at full speed. Replacing
many of the plastic components with some of the
aftermarket aluminum goodies that IRC has to offer would
make the Photon almost indestructible.
Robitronic has
found a winner with the Scalpel. It is a blast to drive,
easy to build and setup, and a simple design makes it a
breeze to maintain.
Being one of the
first 1/18-scale pan cars on the market, the Scalpel is
sure to draw some serious attention from micro fans as
well as 1/12-scale and sedan racers alike.
With the addition
of a load of hop-ups from Robitronic (like red anodized
damper disks, steering arms, brushless-motor pod-plate,
front bumper, and a six-cell graphite chassis), the
popularity of the Scalpel is sure to grow.
Links
Hitec RCD Inc.,
www.hitecrcd.com,
(858) 748-6948
Novak Electronics Inc., www.teamnovak.com,
(949) 833-8873
Paragon Racing,
(952) 442-6364
Robitronic,
distributed by Axial, www.axialracing.com,
(949) 600-8642
Spektrum, distributed by Horizon
Hobby, www.spektrumrc.com,
(217) 352-1913
Team Scream,
www.teamscreamcellmatching.com,
(978) 337-0429
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