- Joined
- Nov 18, 2005
- Messages
- 1,726
I have submitted to IMPBA a possible rule change that would make it more closely resemble the 8 scale rules as it relates to the exposed exhaust. I have been asked to explain my rationale so here it goes...
I have been building 6 scales for quite some time. My first was a blazer lauterbach that I converted to a 71 miss madison. It was a challenge to make a fake allison to work over the side exhaust but it looked awsome once completed. Unfortunately there was some of the carb and header showing. Enough to make it technically illegal. I have built several 1980s style boats and incorporated a rear exhaust in most cases which made it easy to conceal both motor and exhaust. 2 recent issues have surfaced with this class. First, in the last few years there are fewer rear exhaust options which makes it increasingly more difficult to conceal the carb and header. I have personally raised the height on the deck of wooden hulls to conceal the carb and header with good results. It hides the motor and still "appears " scale. Unfortunately this may not be an easy option for a newbie with a glass hull. I know of 1 modeler rotating the motor about 15 degrees to hide the header but still has issues with the carb. The second issue is that more modelers are building more recent designs of unlimiteds. These boats have really short exhaust stacks and shallow decks in the back making it nearly impossible to run the pipe out the transom with out burning the hull. Running the exhaust out the fake turbin exhaust works great. It allows the pipe to stay cool but makes the boat illegal as too much pipe shows. I personally know of 1 boater who was forced to cut off the muffler of his CMB pipe to try to be legal. We shouldn't have to sacrifice dangerously high decibel levels just to hide the pipe. I had to extend the fake exhaust on my miss boeing at the internats to be legal. (It looked stupid).
For the future of the class, we need to relax the rules just a little, similar to the 8 scale rules in the interest of safety and increased popularity. No one, including me, wants to see a bunch of gas sport hydros in the 6 scale class but we need some safe and easy options so that the class can continue to grow.
I have been building 6 scales for quite some time. My first was a blazer lauterbach that I converted to a 71 miss madison. It was a challenge to make a fake allison to work over the side exhaust but it looked awsome once completed. Unfortunately there was some of the carb and header showing. Enough to make it technically illegal. I have built several 1980s style boats and incorporated a rear exhaust in most cases which made it easy to conceal both motor and exhaust. 2 recent issues have surfaced with this class. First, in the last few years there are fewer rear exhaust options which makes it increasingly more difficult to conceal the carb and header. I have personally raised the height on the deck of wooden hulls to conceal the carb and header with good results. It hides the motor and still "appears " scale. Unfortunately this may not be an easy option for a newbie with a glass hull. I know of 1 modeler rotating the motor about 15 degrees to hide the header but still has issues with the carb. The second issue is that more modelers are building more recent designs of unlimiteds. These boats have really short exhaust stacks and shallow decks in the back making it nearly impossible to run the pipe out the transom with out burning the hull. Running the exhaust out the fake turbin exhaust works great. It allows the pipe to stay cool but makes the boat illegal as too much pipe shows. I personally know of 1 boater who was forced to cut off the muffler of his CMB pipe to try to be legal. We shouldn't have to sacrifice dangerously high decibel levels just to hide the pipe. I had to extend the fake exhaust on my miss boeing at the internats to be legal. (It looked stupid).
For the future of the class, we need to relax the rules just a little, similar to the 8 scale rules in the interest of safety and increased popularity. No one, including me, wants to see a bunch of gas sport hydros in the 6 scale class but we need some safe and easy options so that the class can continue to grow.