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Thread: Insane Mono for P Mono class-any tips?

  1. #1
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    Default Insane Mono for P Mono Limited (EDITED) class-any tips?

    I picked up an Insane 34" Mono from the local hobby shop. It came with a 4082 1600kv motor a OSE 150esc and an Octura 642 prop which I know is WAY too small.

    Anyone have a decent starting point setup for what motor and prop?
    Last edited by 1BadIndian; 09-13-2022 at 12:12 PM.

  2. #2
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    That should be plenty of motor. Why don't you run it and check temperature. 6-S with a 44-45 mm prop depending on pitch should move that hull along quite nicely. If you don't already have a temperature gun, go out and buy one.

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    Our club doesn't run 6s P mono, only P limited mono on 4s

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    If you wAnt to race that, you could start with a 48mm 3 blade and go up. Your limiting factor will be the 150amp esc. Definitely keep temps under control. I run the castle mamba monster X8s and, like all in our club who do, am super happy with temps. With a bigger esc, I suspect you could end up with a 452/3 prop and high 50s for speed, depending on your setup.
    "Look good doin' it"
    See the fleet

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    I'm not opposed to changing the motor if needed as well.

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    First things first, the subject says P Mono. Then in a comment you mentioned your club only runs P-Limited Mono. Which is it? P Mono there are no motor restrictions, you can use anything. P-Limited mono you are limited to a maximum of a 3660 sized motor, hence, the limited part.

    If you're going for full P, you're going to end up with a lot of prop considering the low kv rating of that motor. That little X642 is not enough, you're right. Even an X648 is leaving about 5mph on the table to be competitive in my club. But it could work. Switching over to the ABC props, a 1916 17-45 or even 1917 17-45 would probably get you competitive with that motor. All that said, while it can work, your prop selection options go way down with that low of a kv motor on 4S. Something in the 1900-2300kv range would be more typical, and open you up to many more prop options.

    If you're going for P-Limited, you're going to have to buy a motor, as that one is too large to be legal for Limited.

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    She's too fat for limited mono. I know the boat. It's a heavy lay up.

    If you want to try racing it with us you would swap out the motor for a 36mmx60mm motor at any kv. Shoot for around 2000kv. Best out of the box option in my opinion is the Dynamite. I like that it's 6 poles. Has a tic more torque as a result. Runs cooler than say a Leopard that's 2000kv.

    https://www.offshoreelectrics.com/pr...od=hh-dynm3831

    Then maybe 6000mah worth of 4s batteries. Start around 45mm for a prop. ABC 1814-17-45 propeller. Check heat after a couple laps. Work up from there

    I think Frank tried that boat on a limited setup before he decided to buy the Raider from OSE. I can't totally remember though. He tries all kinds of things.......cuz he's a junky. Have you seen the twin cat he bought from OSE? Holy crap.
    Noisy person

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    Thanks everyone. Sorry tbonemcniel I was not accurate in the original subject line. I am just starting out in the electric boat world of racing. Met a couple of the guys from the local race pond and the bug has bitten me pretty hard. I'm not totally new to boats as I raced competitively until 2005 in the gas world, though I was IMPBA. Look forward to getting this boats under way and then also spreading anything I learn along the way to a guy just like me down the road. After all if we don't promote the sport and grow it, then it will only be a few of us old guys standing on the driver stand trying to make up enough boats to run a class.

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    Quote Originally Posted by 1BadIndian View Post
    Thanks everyone. Sorry tbonemcniel I was not accurate in the original subject line. I am just starting out in the electric boat world of racing. Met a couple of the guys from the local race pond and the bug has bitten me pretty hard. I'm not totally new to boats as I raced competitively until 2005 in the gas world, though I was IMPBA. Look forward to getting this boats under way and then also spreading anything I learn along the way to a guy just like me down the road. After all if we don't promote the sport and grow it, then it will only be a few of us old guys standing on the driver stand trying to make up enough boats to run a class.
    Of course! That was me a couple years ago. Your fellow club member TS Davis nailed a P-Limited Mono setup. He almost described mine. Mine is a fiberglass TFL Pursuit hull, OSE Raider ESC, Leopard 3660 2050kv motor, 6,000 mAh of 4S, and a 45mm prop. She does great and has won me quite a few races.

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    If you’re serious about spec mono you’re gonna run a cut down leopard or tenshock czll2240 2020 kv Cut down and shortened by Don or a 1415 cut down. If you want something that pulls really pull hard you want a viper motor. And you need a castle ESC you need to know exactly what’s going on with the motor.

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    Greg any more info about the motors you listed? Thanks man

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    Quote Originally Posted by Greg Schweers View Post
    If you’re serious about spec mono you’re gonna run a cut down leopard or tenshock czll2240 2020 kv Cut down and shortened by Don or a 1415 cut down. If you want something that pulls really pull hard you want a viper motor. And you need a castle ESC you need to know exactly what’s going on with the motor.
    This recently killed my interest in this class. If I had known this was going on before I sold Tom that cat I wouldn't have sold it. Oh well...
    Nortavlag Bulc

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    The motor rule change actually save me money when you’re running 5 to 6 classes a day you’re gonna burn stuff up. i’ve been running rewound motors now for over two years I haven’t burned one up yet. I remember years ago when everybody was running UL one motors I bought over 30 UL1. I can’t imagine how many pro boat 2000 motors I bought and burned up.

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    Me too Greg. I have de-soldered a couple connectors but no failures yet. No ESC failures in limited either. I ripped a sporty in half. It bobbed in the water for a bit. Hung from the flotation. Took all the parts out of it and dropped in a new boat. Raced it all season. I did injure a 2D motor pretty bad in a Raptor but that makes perfect sense. Even that didn't go thermal nuclear.
    Noisy person

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    I just don't see much of a difference between Lmtd and full P classes anymore. There is no limit to the power people are putting into a 60mm long can. And the $200 Tenshock motor is 38mm in diameter, I thought the rule was max 37.1mm??? All people had to do was prop within the stock motor limits but nobody ever seems satisfied with 1000watts or so.

    Why didn't they just say whoa at what cans could be rewound? Keep it to the blue and yellow cans rewound??
    Nortavlag Bulc

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    The fact that you can't "see" the difference doesn't make it so Ray. The numbers don't lie.

    Examples....

    The IMPBA P sport 2 lap record is 20.936 second. That IS smoke'n in my opinion. The best Limited sport number to date was 25.945 seconds. 5 seconds slower. That was set with one of Don's re-winds too.

    The NAMBA P Mono SAW record is 9.165 mph faster than the P limited mono record. Another Huff motor.

    For the rigger guys. Oval times were closer but still 1.5 seconds apart. In time trials that's a life time. That's at least a straight away behind. The P rigger SAW record is 39.173 mph fast than limited. Not even in the same stratosphere.

    Guys like to say "there's no difference" but the data doesn't support the claim.
    Noisy person

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    I really meant the $$ aspect Terry. The cost of limited power plants for boats has (on average) at least doubled and as you say they are slower than full P. It just seems like people are chasing the dragon so to say.

    A TP power 4070 https://www.offshoreelectrics.com/pr...rod=tp-4070-v1 is a similar in price to a Viper motor http://ecomaster.torgg.com/product/m...-viper-vz-2240 $20 bucks difference and I'm not showing the $200 Tenshock motor people are shaving down diameter. A huff rewind of a Leo 3674 is $80 for motor (min from OSE, $100 on Ebay) and another $50 for a rewind.

    Why not just spend approx. $20 more and go faster in full P?
    Nortavlag Bulc

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    Quote Originally Posted by ray schrauwen View Post
    Why not just spend approx. $20 more and go faster in full P?
    Well. A list....

    People can't handle the higher speed
    Parts wear out sooner
    You need to pull 370 amps to do it so Castle XLX2 minimum
    You need to carry 10,000mah on board vs 6000
    Those cells better be high C rated or they will puff at that amperage
    When you stuff it the carnage is worse
    A collision in full P is catO'strophic (git the pool skimmer)
    The electronic failure isn't an "IF" it's a "when". Each pull of the trigger is one pull closer to the fire.

    Just some things off the top of my head.

    The motor is only a part. One piece of an assembly. A P Sport and a P limited Sport are only similar in that they are both sporties and both under 34". My P and Limited aren't interchangeable. They're different animals with common DNA.

    It's so odd to me still. If I purpose design a one off hull for limited that only I know how to build, run it, test, it tweak it, test, tweak, build it out of un-obtainum resin, massage a prop made from the dust of Saturn's rings......everyone is in awe of my skills and dedication. If I build a motor for limited......well that's not really in the spirit of competition. Makes no danged sense to me.
    Noisy person

  19. #19
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    I could wind my own motors too but being in a socialist country it will cost about 50% more to do so. It already costs at least 30% more for most component because of the exchange rate. It IS a factor as to why there is less participation up here not including the tax and duty we try to avoid at every chance.

    I don't fault anyone for winding their own motors, it's a wonderful thing however the *limited* part of the class seems to be disappearing. Too bad I don't live in Texas I like their limited N2 sport hydro class. I know, it's like paint drying. Some, not me, might say same about 1/10 scale.

    Why was it necessary to go beyond rewinding the blue motors (Edit* or any other factory 36mm x 60mm motor) when they achieved the goal of greater reliability?
    Nortavlag Bulc

  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by ray schrauwen View Post
    I could wind my own motors too but being in a socialist country it will cost about 50% more to do so. It already costs at least 30% more for most component because of the exchange rate. It IS a factor as to why there is less participation up here not including the tax and duty we try to avoid at every chance.

    I don't fault anyone for winding their own motors, it's a wonderful thing however the *limited* part of the class seems to be disappearing. Too bad I don't live in Texas I like their limited N2 sport hydro class. I know, it's like paint drying. Some, not me, might say same about 1/10 scale.

    Why was it necessary to go beyond rewinding the blue motors (Edit* or any other factory 36mm x 60mm motor) when they achieved the goal of greater reliability?
    Our N2 class is fun. We're all on the same cheap motor and the same prop B/S by OSE. Makes it VERY competitive, and cheap and easy to enter.

  21. #21
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    We raced N2 sport with a can size and kv limit for years.
    Noisy person

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    Hey Terry,

    At the last record trials in Huntsville, I drove over there to help Mark Grim if I could, with any motor problems he might have while running his NexGen P Limited rigger. He was trying to lower the limited oval record of 18.636, which he did pretty easily. Then he went after the full P record of 16.916. It took most of the day because of waiting for the water to calm, and getting only 2 to 4 laps before the battery start falling off and the boat slows to much. With a boat setup like this, you can actually see and hear when the battery looses even a small amount of power. The first lap with a fresh battery is stoopid fast, then it must drop 2-3 mph on the second lap.

    He kept at it through the day working the time down and honing his driving skill to match the new speeds. Driving at these speeds is more of a "timing" thing, instead of watching it go round and adjusting the line a little here and there. If you have to adjust the line, that run is over, because adjustments waste time.

    Looking at the data after a run, everything looked great temp, amps, and rpm wise. I suggested he prop up. But he didn't want to saying that the setup really liked THAT prop. So he "tweaked" the prop tips a smidgen and gave it another try late in the afternoon on some smoother water. Nobody else was running much so he had the water whenever he could get it ready again. And finally he laid down two really good tight on the buoys laps, with fresh battery , and BOOM ...16.7 seconds. That's 2 tenths under the NAMBA full P record and 1/2 second under the IMPBA record of 17.235!

    He wants to credit the win to the prop work, because he's a prop guy. I like to say that it was ALL because of the motor, because I'm a motor guy. The battery producer will surely say it was all because of the battery. We all will admit that it had a little (everything) to do with the setup. But if that was the case, then why didn't the previous 50 laps break a record??? Because it took a damn good driver, which he is, that long and that many attempts to figure out what it was going to take for him to lay down two PERFECT laps.

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    At our last Grand Prix series race in south Georgia. I couldn't attend so my son Lamar went alone. While loading the trailer he wasn't paying attention and loaded up his Limited mono instead of his P mono. All of our boats look exactly alike for team colors and tactical reasons. And for those outside of our area. We don't have P limited this year, it was not allowed to participate.

    So, he didn't realize this until P was in the get ready and the radio didn't work! He switched the TX to the right boat and gave it a try. He won all three heats!!! And this aint no CZII or Viper, or cut down leopard either. It's something I made for him back when we had the 3656 rule. It's actually in an Aquacraft can. I don't remember what's on the inside, but it can't be very wild because I didn't know exactly what to do with them back then. It's been in his boat for 3-4 years now, never even been out of the hull during that time.

    Was it the motor that won it for him? Absolutely not!

    The setup, yes that always helps. Was it the prop? We do our own. Take it out of the bag, sharpen the leading edge and half ass balance it, and go.

    The batteries? I doubt it cause there the same as what everybody else uses. We even use some old Hobby King batteries on sometimes.

    Do you think it could have been his driving??

    Terry, you know what I'm talking about. Tyler does the same thing. When he gets a little older, maybe he'll learn how to slow down when he needs to.

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    Logged data, lap times and records tell the story here. We have seen a 2x performance jump switching from the older AQ motors to the newer motors. I believe every single one of the new P-Ltd records has been set with a Huff motor of some variety. That tells you Don has worked miracles on these little motors and the performance is that much better.

    Older 2030 and 1800kv AQ motors were on the limit around 90-100A with the stock winding. If you could push one beyond that you had a unicorn. Today the rewound motors can run double what the stock winding can. I have logged data from every single record run that either Mark Grim or myself set. Some of these rewound motors are limited by the 400A controllers!

    Honestly today there is not much "limited" about these motors anymore. They are on par with 90% of full p-setups.

    Speaking of the records in NAMBA:

    P-Hydro SAW: 138mph with a TP3650 motor
    P-Ltd Hydro SAW: 120mph with a Huff motor, same hull, same controller and same prop.

    P-mono SAW: 80.6mph with a LMT 1950 motor
    P-Ltd mono SAW: 71.4mph with a Huff motor

    P-Sport Hydro SAW: 97mph with a Neu 1521 I believe
    P-Ltd sport hydro SAW: 80.27mph with a Huff motor

    P-hydro 2-lap: 16.7s with a Huff motor, 16.9s with a TP3650 motor
    P-Ltd Hydro 2-lap: 18.63s with a Huff motor,

    P-mono 2-lap: 24.8s with a TP4070
    P-Ltd mono 2-lap: 24.4s with a Huff motor

    P-Sport Hydro 2-lap: 23.0s with a LMT 1950
    P-Ltd Sport hydro 2-lap: 25.9s with a Huff motor

    Besides the sport hydro record which Kris Flynn owns and the rigger SAW record most records are pretty close.
    Tyler Garrard
    NAMBA 639/IMPBA 20525
    T-Hydro @ 142.94mph former WR

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    Tyler, I really think that we would have a good shot at getting that P hydro saw record. I have a motor with 15% more displacement than the one you were using, and that would be a good increase in horsepower. But You're going to have to shoehorn an XLX2 in there for more ampacity.
    AmpDaddy
    don huff

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    P mono and limited mono 2 laps are close. That P mono and P Sport 2 lap for NAMBA are both weak IMO. The rest are light years apart.

    Don, Tyler is getting there. He's been racing for Xray for a year now. Great cars but getting parts for them is a nuisance. He has to ship every part as nobody has them on the shelf. So he tends to drive cleaner as a result. He has no choice. Been good for him. It's forced him to optimize every turn and not crash. Late apexes. Throttle is yer friend kind of stuff. Really been good for him. Seems to translate to boats pretty well.
    Noisy person

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    Quote Originally Posted by donhuff View Post
    Tyler, I really think that we would have a good shot at getting that P hydro saw record. I have a motor with 15% more displacement than the one you were using, and that would be a good increase in horsepower. But You're going to have to shoehorn an XLX2 in there for more ampacity.
    Good to hear you have more in reserve, but no way to shoehorn more controller in that boat. It only fits the ICE/EDGE 200 and barely floats with a 2P battery setup which is needed for 400+A. We would need to tailor-make a rigger design around the motor and controller needed to up that record.

    We also need longer lakes to reach higher speeds. At 147mph I am out of room at Huntsville to slow down. This means traveling back to Munich.
    Tyler Garrard
    NAMBA 639/IMPBA 20525
    T-Hydro @ 142.94mph former WR

  28. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by RaceMechaniX View Post
    We also need longer lakes to reach higher speeds. At 147mph I am out of room at Huntsville to slow down. This means traveling back to Munich.
    What about an air brake like Harris used?
    Noisy person

  29. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by T.S.Davis View Post
    What about an air brake like Harris used?
    Too much complexity for my liking. And with the larger heavier riggers it does not make a significant difference compared to the smaller ones. Admittingly my riggers are heavier and more portly compared to the European designs or Chris' rigger.
    Tyler Garrard
    NAMBA 639/IMPBA 20525
    T-Hydro @ 142.94mph former WR

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    When you have 5 to 6 courses a day, you're going to burn through equipment quickly, so the motor regulation modification really helped me save money. I haven't destroyed a rewound motor in over two years of use. I can recall purchasing more than 30 UL1 motors back when everyone was using them. It's impossible to say how many pro boat 2000 engines I purchased and ruined.

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