Though I played down the speed of my result, it's actually quite good because by standard, hybrids are less fast than full electric cars. This virtually achieves full EV speed.
I wonder if it would make a difference if you got the motors closer and had just one wheel in the middle driving them. You'd probably have to press the wheel in the middle of your rail.
Pressing the center wheels OR rail are the things I tried first. They force the motors into a slant and perform terribly. I also had a quick look at having the center wheels on the body of the motor instead of the axles. I don't think distance is the issue as if anything the original model has the left wheels FURTHER apart. The main problem is the technique to hold the center wheels and the original model uses a complicated method which involves closed-circuit gluing (gluing ALL connections) which I didn't master. I CANNOT make the V6 correctly without learning how to make closed circuits and even if I did, I don't know how to get the center wheels to fit in while quantum linked to wagon wheels (quantum link the wagon wheels DOWN afterwards would do it I suppose?). I believe I can however make the V9 so I'll have a look at that. The idea of both being powered by 1 center wheel is interesting and I've posted a build doing that before. Less weight should equal better performance though some argue the connection works best having 1 dedicated wheel. Both sides sound reputable so I don't know which to believe. What I do know is the V6 has a center wheel per motor axle, is faster than a rocket and has screen freezing issues due to the sheer speed.
Ahhh I already did this car but with an elongated stone slab found in the Forward Force Shrine. I called it Plank the Tank because it was based on Cheesepuf’s Hank. I still like fesca or dual fesca builds better for speed. Don’t ask me about dual fesca just one prototype took me 2 weeks to complete it was a pain linking the 2 parts to a control speed. Not sure if worth it BUT it did climb good inclines and it sure was fast. There’s a korok n shaped piece that when quantum linked serves as a great support for these. Let me know if you want the location. Also check Azama’s Hyperbolid for a cool fesca based model that has star speed.
@@KingXprobably not but it does reach and maintain starspeed something that the V6 showcased here, Hank and even Plank have trouble with. You should try this build with the long slab from Forward Force, offers better protection and allows for link to ride in the middle with u blocks and such. Speed should be the same as this one too.
@@iCandy212 I'll have a look at that slab. I've had some discussion with Efficient_Demand and it turns out that quantum linking to the motor does provide a small boost, say a car that went at 25 m/s in neutral would now go at 27 m/s. According to my tests there was no affect because I was testing with pure electric builds, this is a solution for hybrids that have center-pressing wheels. The V9 is easier to make than the V6 and is still pretty fast.
Though I played down the speed of my result, it's actually quite good because by standard, hybrids are less fast than full electric cars. This virtually achieves full EV speed.
I wonder if it would make a difference if you got the motors closer and had just one wheel in the middle driving them. You'd probably have to press the wheel in the middle of your rail.
Pressing the center wheels OR rail are the things I tried first. They force the motors into a slant and perform terribly. I also had a quick look at having the center wheels on the body of the motor instead of the axles. I don't think distance is the issue as if anything the original model has the left wheels FURTHER apart. The main problem is the technique to hold the center wheels and the original model uses a complicated method which involves closed-circuit gluing (gluing ALL connections) which I didn't master. I CANNOT make the V6 correctly without learning how to make closed circuits and even if I did, I don't know how to get the center wheels to fit in while quantum linked to wagon wheels (quantum link the wagon wheels DOWN afterwards would do it I suppose?). I believe I can however make the V9 so I'll have a look at that.
The idea of both being powered by 1 center wheel is interesting and I've posted a build doing that before. Less weight should equal better performance though some argue the connection works best having 1 dedicated wheel. Both sides sound reputable so I don't know which to believe. What I do know is the V6 has a center wheel per motor axle, is faster than a rocket and has screen freezing issues due to the sheer speed.
Ahhh I already did this car but with an elongated stone slab found in the Forward Force Shrine. I called it Plank the Tank because it was based on Cheesepuf’s Hank.
I still like fesca or dual fesca builds better for speed. Don’t ask me about dual fesca just one prototype took me 2 weeks to complete it was a pain linking the 2 parts to a control speed. Not sure if worth it BUT it did climb good inclines and it sure was fast. There’s a korok n shaped piece that when quantum linked serves as a great support for these. Let me know if you want the location.
Also check Azama’s Hyperbolid for a cool fesca based model that has star speed.
Ah but are your dual Fesca builds faster than a rocket like the V6 is?
@@KingXprobably not but it does reach and maintain starspeed something that the V6 showcased here, Hank and even Plank have trouble with. You should try this build with the long slab from Forward Force, offers better protection and allows for link to ride in the middle with u blocks and such. Speed should be the same as this one too.
@@iCandy212 I'll have a look at that slab. I've had some discussion with Efficient_Demand and it turns out that quantum linking to the motor does provide a small boost, say a car that went at 25 m/s in neutral would now go at 27 m/s. According to my tests there was no affect because I was testing with pure electric builds, this is a solution for hybrids that have center-pressing wheels.
The V9 is easier to make than the V6 and is still pretty fast.
THIS GAME HAS MOTORS?
Oh yeah, electric motors normally used for spinning propellers but we find other applications.
Where do you find them? @@KingX
@@isaac242 Shown here: ruclips.net/video/jTNffxlMzH4/видео.html
Man, that is ridiculous (in a good way)! Finding ways of exploiting the game's engine like this...speedrunners will have a field day with it!