http://www.harleydesigns.com/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/330071moab1.jpg http://www.harleydesigns.com/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/544661vert1.jpg http://www.harleydesigns.com/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/881841haulin.jpg http://www.harleydesigns.com/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/945455cresting.jpg
USRCCA Nationals 2008 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Harley   
Sunday, 24 May 2009 22:20

 

nationals_logo

 

 

2008 USRCCA NATIONALS


The 2008 USRCCA Nationals was held once again in Moab, Utah. Moab is well known in the full-size off-road world for its amazing terrain and mile and miles of trails. Our event was held next to the world famous Potato Salad Hill.  Our trip began on Thursday night at about 9:30 as we hit the road. There were 4 of us making the trek, 2 competitors and 1 spectator from KCRC and 1 competitor from CMRCRC. It is a 15 hour drive covering about 1000 miles.

We arrived in Moab shortly before noon on Friday, tech started at 1:00. After getting our rigs through tech we practiced on the surround rocks for a few hours trying to learn the terrain. The rock is like none I had crawled on before, it was just extremely compacted sand. You could watch your tires dig a hole in the rock. We headed back to town that night to get a good nights rest, the next morning would come very quickly.

The next morning we arrived at the comp site slightly after 6 AM. The event was running the Free Crawl format, this means you decide when you want to run and in what order you want to tackle the courses.  I decided to hit course 1 first, but many others had the same idea.

Course 1:

This proved to be the most butal course of the day. Tackling this course as early as possible was key. The line was very long but you could watch as every competitor passed through that the course was changing drastically and not for the better. A competitor attempting Gate 4 had caused a large piece of rock to become dislodged and fall from the course. After that point very few competitors were able to progress this gate. I timed out attempting this gate, very disappointing.

 

Course 2:

This course turned out to be perfectly suited for my rig. A few steep climbs requiring both breakover angle and wheels speed, perfect for my setup. This course went very quickly for me and I ended up taking only 1 reverse before finishing the course.
 

Course 3:

Course 3 was a difficult course requiring wheelspeed and traction. After progressing the third gate there was a long uphill stair steping obstacle. I burnt up all of my time trying to gain traction while staying on course. No amount of wheel speed was allowing me to make it to the top. Tumble after tumble I had to quickly make my way back and attempt again until the 5 min time limit passed, another dissappointing course.
 

Course 4:

This course was a mix of wedge climbs and intense side hills. Some slick rock at the bottom of gate 2 was causing many a lot of trouble. It took a few attempts but I was able to walk up the ledge and progress through the rest of the course. The final gate was very tricky forcing you to really test your rigs limits as far as CG went.
 
 

Final Results

The end result of the trip yielding me 56 place out of about 100 crawlers.
Last Updated on Monday, 25 May 2009 03:05
 

Product Reviews

Proline Chisels and 2-Stage Foam

News image

  Just as with everything else, RC Rock Crawling see’s certain trends develop with new product and the way people setup their trucks. In the earlier days of the 2.2 class we were modifying Maxx sized tires onto popular 2.2 tire sidewalls to get a... Read more...

Futaba 4PK

News image

  MOA (motor on axle) rigs made a huge impact in RC Crawling in 2008 with the release of the EnRoute Berg axles.  Now that we had decent MOA's we needed a radio that gave us more control.   Read more...

100%
-
+
2
Show options

C10 Rock Racer

News image

   For the last two years my local club, KCRC, has hosted a small rock racing event. One of our memebers builds constructs a simple course consisting of rocks, logs, jumps, and whatever else is laying around. Last year I modified my comp rig for t... Read more...

The ARC Introduction

News image

 The ARC was the evolution of several ideas and concepts that are popular in the world of RC crawling.  With MOA crawlers dominating the 2.2 crawling scene there are many aspects of chassis design that can now be opened up. The chassis don't have t... Read more...

100%
-
+
2
Show options