12th-Apr-20, 12:38 AM
Hello Jeremy, looking forward to meeting you at one of the future DiSCA GT3 races
Nice topic and you've made some good progress with the Porsche.
A few remarks in addition to those made by Alan.
First off all some protective measures to prolong the life of your O2 chip:
Lat but not least, Order that lightweight vacformed interior for your Porsche and you'll be much closer to the min weight even with a light kit.
With kind regards
Tamar
Nice topic and you've made some good progress with the Porsche.
A few remarks in addition to those made by Alan.
First off all some protective measures to prolong the life of your O2 chip:
- get some small diameter heat shrink tube and isolate the bare metal legs of the ferrite man, the front leg is very close to the end bell, if your wire moves due to a crash ...short circuit = dead chip. While your at it, reroute the legs so that they will clear the rear body support tabs as the way you have them now will most likely interfere with your bodyfloat.
- get a slightly bigger ø 5-8 mm long heat shrink tube that will fit over your Chip antenna, slide it down to the base of the antenna and secure with some flexible glue to the chip. Once glue has set shrink tube on top side. This will reinforce the base of your antenna and prevent it from braking off the chip.
- Mount your chip flexible on your chassis this will prolong life, not only in crashes but also during regular running as it will dampen the vibrations and zillion little bumps as your car rides the track connections. My preferred mounting material : double sided foam tape and or foam pads. Avoid hot glue.
Lat but not least, Order that lightweight vacformed interior for your Porsche and you'll be much closer to the min weight even with a light kit.
With kind regards
Tamar

![[+]](https://slotracer.online/community/images/bootbb/collapse_collapsed.png)