Home
Full Throttle
Garage
Images
Links
Paint Shop
Pit Lane
Reviews
Videos
    --CATEGORY--
General Information
General Electric
General Nitro
HPI Savage
Losi LST
Sportwerks Mayhem
Traxxas E. Rustler
Traxxas E. Stampede
Traxxas N. Rustler
Traxxas N. Stampede
Traxxas E-Maxx
Traxxas T-Maxx
Traxxas Revo


      --ARTICLE--
Ball Joints
Body Posts
CVD's
Differential Packing
Exploded Views
Masher 2000's
Metal-Gear Servos
MIP CVD's
Motor Head Swap
Pullstart Conversion
Receiver Pack
Servo Savers/Horns
Shocks
Slipper Clutch
Slipper Pegs
Spur Gap
Steel Spur
Wheelie Bar

Properly Adjusting the Slipper Clutch



Adjusting the slipper clutch is crucial to performance and reduced drive train failure. If the slipper clutch is set too tight, you stand a greater risk of tearing up spur, differential, and plastic idler gears. If the slipper is set too loose, you are going to lose most of your power to the clutch during acceleration and you stand a chance of heating the slipper pegs up to a point where you can melt the inside of the spur gear. As you can guess there's a fairly fine line between the two. Hopefully this will help you understand how to properly adjust it.

The first thing you need to do is to tighten the slipper clutch down all the way. After you have tightened the slipper down, loosen the nut 1/4 turn to 1/2 of a turn. The 1/4 turn range between 1/4 and 1/2 of a turn is where you want to stay with your adjustment. Closer to the 1/4 mark gives you less slippage, while closer to the 1/2 mark gives you more slippage.

Although these pictures are from a Electric Stampede the procedure is the same for the Nitro Stampede.

Here where you adjustment range should fall between.




For more information regarding setting your slipper clutch, see the Traxxas article entitled Slipper Clutch Adjustment.


misbehavin-rc.com © 2002-2008