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Old 27-04-2012
DJFlyinbin DJFlyinbin is offline
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Default Rectangular Vs round holes for ball diff gear

Does anybody know why are the holes for the diff balls (eg in RB5) rectangular instead of simpy round?
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  #2  
Old 27-04-2012
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RogerM RogerM is offline
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Limits the amount of contact with between ball and gear ... makes for a smoother and free diff action.

Kyosho going for the best practical ( triangle would be better but a pain to mold) engineering solution as always
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Old 28-04-2012
DJFlyinbin DJFlyinbin is offline
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But at the same time the contact area is reduced to a point instead of a semi -circle so it is easier to damage the gear which is made of much softer material than the ball
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Old 07-05-2012
foampervert foampervert is offline
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Default Prevents diff meltdowns

The single contact point from a rectangular hole ensures that the ball is rubbing up against the gear at only 1 speed(1 contact point = 1 rotational speed).
If the hole is round, the ball may contact at more then 1 point(depending on how close in dimensions the hole and ball are), let's assume the hole IS much larger then the ball. There will be a larger contact point, as the different parts of the ball are moving at different speeds (rotation is same, but actual speed is different). The ball will be causing the gear to overheat because of the differential in speeds. Just imagine stepping on the gas pedal in your car and applying brakes at the same time. Something is gonna give.

The single point contact actually makes it more durable.

Properly built, of course.

-Alexander
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