It is a well explained and documented build with a nice synchronized 895 based idler shaft type gearbox subassembly.

Be forewarned, this is a visual example, but is not open source. The files and code are posted on cults 3d for $20. This is not an endorsement. The project does not appear to be an On Shape subscription bait scam, but I have no affiliation, have not purchased, and have no way of knowing what is included behind the pay wall.

Personally, the visual example is all I need and could easily reproduce this in FreeCAD. This build is hardware intensive in the M3/M4/bearings sense but still budget standard. They are using 2mm aluminum welding rod for the track pins. The microcontroller is the Arduino Mega2560 with cheap motor driver modules, battery, RC control scheme, servo for the gear shifter, and some RC car dampers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOjda40t6Ng

https://howtomechatronics.com/projects/making-a-beast-of-a-3d-printed-rc-tank-with-dual-speed-gearbox/

  • Idreamofcheesy@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    I’m fine with creators wetting their beaks when they put a lot of work into something.

    Do they have a costed BoM for this? I’d hate to drop 20 bucks just to learn I need to drop another 200 bucks.

    • j4k3@lemmy.worldOPM
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      17 days ago

      I didn’t see one, but I didn’t look very hard. It wasn’t in the video when I watched. I’d say $200 is probably way low. That much hardware, bearings, ardy, modules, a few spools, RC controller, wires, connectors, a shield, components, lights, motors, servo… Probably falls somewhere around the $500-$800 range, if you try to buy them all at once and not the piecemeal and partial collections most of us have already. In all likelihood most of us will need at least half that spend to get everything needed. If one did this with Adafruit, McMasters, a US board house, and high quality filament, it could easily top $1k.