I get it. Fred and I did that trip to Colorado straight through. 23 hours. It was dumb. Should have stopped somewhere. I was disoriented all week and raced like I felt.
I think MRP was the first to do RTR boats. They had a good size list of boats to choose from as well.
Mark
The MRC Excalibur had to be around the same era. I remember the Fastcat coming out right around the same time. My mother bought me the Excalibur as a gift for getting straight A's. Think it was 1983 maybe. Pretty sure the MRP stuff was on the shelf then too. The cat was crazy expensive though. Like 200 bucks or something. hahaha
Most r/c gear / boats / planes etc were quite expensive in the early 80,s and even more expensive in the 70,s. there were some great radio sets on the market from Futaba in those days but i just didn,t have the money to afford to buy a set for my r/c planes, had to settle for used radio sets. i remember the company MRP going back some years too.
Most r/c gear / boats / planes etc were quite expensive in the early 80,s and even more expensive in the 70,s. there were some great radio sets on the market from Futaba in those days but i just didn,t have the money to afford to buy a set for my r/c planes, had to settle for used radio sets. i remember the company MRP going back some years too.
A Hydro Zeta ESC was $300 back in 1987.
There should be no complaints these days on pricing.
Nice if you had the money, I used switcher units or servo driven variable resistors, either of which were much cheaper than any of the current popular ESCs, although you can get a Suppo for about the same.
Graupner have been making and selling raceworthy consistently since the early '90s when I got into FE, and probably before that too.
Back onto subject, if Hobbyco are a distributor, do they actually own Aquacraft or just the rights to distribute their products? If they are just a distributor and they go under it could be good for Aquacraft, now that Aquacraft are a known brand and are in many model shops it is not beyond the whit of Man for them to hire some sales staff and distribute themselves to the same shops that are already stocking their products, cutting out a middleman and allowing them greater profit margins.
Back onto subject, if Hobbyco are a distributor, do they actually own Aquacraft or just the rights to distribute their products? If they are just a distributor and they go under it could be good for Aquacraft, now that Aquacraft are a known brand and are in many model shops it is not beyond the whit of Man for them to hire some sales staff and distribute themselves to the same shops that are already stocking their products, cutting out a middleman and allowing them greater profit margins.
My first boat was a fast cat, it was anything but.
Which to me is kinda what the hobby was in its "Golden years". You bought the initial kit and while it would run, it were no great shakes.
Off to the hobbyshop you would go and after getting advise from the owner you would order all the wrong stuff in an effort to get fast without learning how to get there.
Back then the sales and distributor ships were what ran the shops and kept everyone afloat. No internet, no easy answers and it took money to make any real gains and friends/shop owners to help you get there.
Last year after a 20yr hiatus I got back into RC and I really couldnt believe the amount of speed you could simply "buy" on the cheap and how easy (relatively) it now is to go even faster.
Since Im starting to sound like an old man yelling at the sky Ill just make this one point.
As good as the modern RTR boats are the company's making them are putting themselves out of business. Theres not really much to be gained in the way of repeat business as there used to be, as a lot of the new boats go as fast as the first time owner could want right out of the box.
compare a boat or even a boat motor / engine 45 years back and note the difference now in terms of firstly RTR , there were no rtr boats then as you had to build them yourself, speed difference from then until now is amazing. if you got 20 mph then you would have a record but now you can tripple that speed easy with a rtr boat.
My first boat in the 90's was a 5mph Nikko, paid ~$80 with lawnmowing cash. With inflation you can get a similarly priced AQ RTR that goes 20+. The cash needed to get a 20+ boat back then now gets you 50+ lol.
For Hobbico it seems like a combination of factors, no small part being the s***storm that tanked the economy 10yrs ago. I deal with aftermarket parts for race cars & the number of ppl with disposable cash has increased every year since 2010.
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