King of the sidewalk – Pimping Chris Ride-on car Part 1

UPDATED: 2018-03-06

As i promised a lot of the future posts will be about hacking toys.

In November i bought this Mercedes GLA Class Ride-on kids car for my 1 year old son, a car he loves so much but i have a feeling he will never love less as this build progresses.

You can find it at amazon

So some facts about the car:

Its about 120 cm long, 60 cm wide, 50 cm high and weighs in at around 25 kilos.

It costed about 250 euros and can be driven from the car or controlled by remote. The car has 3 emulated gears, each allowing the motors to higher rpm’s the higher the gear. I say motors, because this model have 2 separate 6 v engines (of type 380/390) which are serial-connected to the 12 volt relay in the receiver. The top speed is 5 km/h. The engines the car came with:

RC-390SMP-5028-68L DC6.V 15000RPM

Gearboxes use all-plastic cogs, which is all good in it’s original state, but this might have to change to support what i want to do:

Knowing nothing about the motors (initially that was) i took some measurements and started to google:

The controller is kind of a all-or-nothing switches, which makes you zig-zag to the left and the right to keep a straight line while driving it using RC along narrow curbs. They added a acceleration lag in the power-on to soften the jerkiness a bit, but unfortunately they didn’t not managed to do the same when dropping the gas, so stopping is pretty abrupt.

Forward/Backward/Left/Right/Shift incrementally/Stop

Additionally it has a 6 songs “stereo” , with a 3.5 mm stereo-plug. The songs are well composed mixture between kids music and electronic dance but 6 songs gets boring fast so this is on the change list. When pushing the start-button you hear a roar of the motor, and pushing the horn makes a “mepp-mepp-mep-mep” tone.

 

Xinghui CLB084-4c 2.4 ghz receiver, charger, motor controllers and stereo.

The receiver can be found on Aliexpress, but a pdf with all pinouts have turned out to be harder to get my hands on. That sucks, as I see pins that are unused meaning it might have more features I don’t know yet. Will reverse engineer it later. All in all it’s a funny toy for it’s price but a lot of improvements can be done.

So what am i planning to do with it?

Well, i have a lot ideas but some cost a bit of money and some are hard to source parts for and some will simply be unsafe.

  • It should be a little faster, with softer acceleration and braking.
  • Replace the radio-controller/receiver, with something a bit more professional, less jerky and with lots of spare channels to control all the electronics.
  • Proper rubber tires giving traction and look better. A few options out there, but I haven’t found exactly what I want.
  • A proper stereo with some umpff!
  • Individual brake disks on the front wheels to be able to do burnouts.
  • Melody horn.
  • Proper seat-belt 3 or 4 point, new seat even?

Let’s get started.

The first thing that struck me when i started screwing it apart was how much space there is left in it. The the hood is screwed down, but once unscrewed yet another gigantic rather empty space is reveled. Same goes for the trunk. Ohhh the potential :)

So where does one start?

Let’s go with the low-hanging fruit. Nothing says car-tuning like RGB LED-stips, and it’s something my son would notice directly so that’s what i went for. End result looks (and sounds) something like this (hosted video on youtube, as i slashdotted my hosting company yesterday thanks to HackerNews):

A second fast win would be stickering it with some AlpineStars, Brembo, Hel performance and GoPro stickers. I had a left-over “i poke bear”-sticker from the pimping of my zx636 ninja, so that went on the hood too.

Speaking of the hood, i mentioned i opened it up however seeing the hood open made me think it should not be screwed down ever again. I made 2 temporary hinges with a glue-gun and two screws, and cut off the majority of all the flanks that held the hood into place making the area easily accessible for future upgrades.

The open hood reveals a lot of free space and a mono speaker.

Ignition-switch:

My little guy is totally fascinated by keys, so needless to say he needs an ignition-key. I found this little switch in one of my favorite stores around the corner, Rotor-radio Amsterdam.

To get it into the car, i had to unscrew large parts of the car.

Then solder it into the harness where the old switch was connected.

Tada!

Reversing camera.

I found this super-cheap dashcam, and decided it would make a great rear reverse camera:

Quality of the picture is great and it also has night-vision :)

Opening it up, shows i will have to solder 17 wires to separate the camera from the circuit-board:

Not impossible but since i intend to install a proper stereo in the dash too, it makes sense putting this on ice until that is done and I know how much space is left.

I got the power!

So far i have not run into the limitations of the battery, but my son is quite young and we only do small rounds with it. However i plan to stick a lot of electronics in this beast so a larger battery makes sense. The car actually had room for the larger battery where the old one was mounted

I replaced the 5.5Ah 12 volt lead-acid with it’s 12 Ah big brother.

Battery upgrade

With brakes, LEDS and what-not, i decided to buy a 8-channel radio. I can only hope this scales to the ideas i have but we will see:

RadioLink T8FB

Getting the radio ready!

I have never built a radio-controlled car from scratch so selecting ESC, servos, motors, batteries was all done ad-hoc, while googling around. This radio is intended for plane/helicopters, so i started by reconfigured the control to spring back the left hand stick when released:

RadioLink T8FB opened up.

For the drive-line i choose a 40Amp 12 volt ESC from Graphner. Two old servos from a small electric plane simulated the servos for the brake-disks and a smaller ESC to control steering.

The old fireblade blinker is connected to the 40Amp ESC to verify that all works. Having it all on the table like this allowed me to calibrate servo’s and ESC’s in a simple way.

Once that seemed to be working i hooked it up to the car. As my son would be very sad if his stereo did not work, i left as much of the old electronics hooked up in the birdsnest you can see below:

Nested the new rc-parts into the original wiring, and it works.

This means that i now can control the car over the 8 channel radio, while still providing power to the old electronics that allow the fake engine sounds and “stereo” to work.

After a bit of tidying up, it is starting to take shape. Doubt it will look like this when i am done, but lets see.

Can you hear me?

Speaking of sounds needless to say he needs a proper horn. I found this 20 watt siren with 6 tones for less than 10 euros, so that’s going in.

I don’t know how loud it is, but it’s f***ing loud.

Adding the ugly keypad on the dash would have been a five minute job, but as i mentioned i want a stereo in it at some point and space is of the essence.

Inside the keypad is a tiny circuit-board that i could make fit inside the steering-wheel, but to fit the center the steering-wheel, it will need to be chopped up.

The best part about cheap electronic tends to be single sided circuit-boards which allow you to customize them very simply. I locate the place that has most free space around components.

After doing some measurements and make sure it will work i use a hobby-knife to cut it in half, making sure i leave enough copper trace to solder cables on to reconnect the half’s.

Next i make a few pilot-holes and start the painstaking process of filing away on the plastic. Not scratching it in the process is an art i still don’t master.

The buttons needs to be trimmed down to fit the housing too. Two component glue fixes them in their position and make sure they spring back out again.

Once everything seems to fall in place i go ahead and solder it. Leaving this part for the end is critical as you are very likely to pull one of these tiny 14 solder-points and the copper it’s attached to if the cable snags later. I secure the ribbon cable with melt-glue to allow me to to be less careful when putting it all together again. The circuit board is screwed back in to new mount-points i took from the old casing, and the whole construction is secured in several layers of melt glue to make sure it can handle hard pushes without breaking of.

Now all the old electronics is mounted back into the steering-wheel.

Cable is threaded through the steering column, and the wheel is re-attached.

The motors!

Engines run in a serial connected fashion, but i hear people on the web slapping both one and two extra batteries on these motors, so with the new fat battery i decided i could afford to parallel-connect them instead.

I have two blocks like this. This one parallel connect the engines and the other serial-connects them, if i ever want to return it to that configuration.

Disaster strikes!

Unfortunately 12 volt, over a 40Amp ESC on a 12ah battery on the RS-390’s was i bit too much for the original design to deal with and one of the gearboxes tossed in the towel.

The accident struck as i was taking it for a test ride on the street by simply reversing the car and hitting full throttle.

I never expected the main cog to crack like this, maybe some of the smaller ones but not the largest..

This made me give up all hope on using those gearboxes for any larger or more powerful type 380/390 motors. I need something a bit beefier for transmission, or it will crumble just like this did very fast.

A new dawn

I went above and beyond the original motors when i bought a 48 volt 1000 watt motor of amazon. The motor is meant for a e-scooter and is 200 times stronger than the original engine so a frame will have to be built. I will follow the same practices you would if building a car. If possible with individual suspension and a rear differential to make sure it corners nice. The base will be widened about 100mm and lowered about 30mm to allow it to sit better on the ground.

Material is slowly collected, the engine, cardans and a rear differential has arrived, i am still waiting for the front disk-brakes and 40kg servos.

I also decided this build will need welding. For material i wish i could go aluminum but a lot of people keep advising against it, and my Argon gas is delayed 2 weeks, meaning i might for steel wishbones. I ordered a 200Amp TIG/MMA welding machine which should allow me to weld both stainless and carbon’ed steels. Additionally i had to rebuilt the main fuse-box in my house to be able to run it without burning my house down. As soon as my gas arrives i can start climbing that hill.

In the next part i will get a rear differential, suspension built and the motor mounted.

 

Suggestions and inspiration is very welcome. Current challenges:

  • I need wheels and have been  looking for weeks with little avail.. They should be 300mm diameter, ~120mm wide, preferably with an aluminium hub and air-filled tires for weight-reduction. Any suggestions are welcome. I currently explored Golfcaddy’s, wheelbarrow, go karts and ATV/Quad.

  • Suspension. Should be 70mm(compressed)-125mm(decompressed) long and deal with 25kg each.

17 thoughts on “King of the sidewalk – Pimping Chris Ride-on car Part 1

  1. Pingback: New top story on Hacker News: Show HN: The king of the sidewalk: Extreme pimping of my sons ride-on – Tech + Hckr News

  2. I’d advise against a 4 point harness unless there’s also a roll cage. Your child would be trapped vertically in case of a rollover in such a harness. The same safety standards are in place for cars at the track as well.

    • Good point about a roll cage! Thanks. Will consider it. My idea is to widen then wheelbase. The tires i am looking to source will add another 10 cm width to the car too, creating a good solid footprint. The engine i got is a 48 volt that i currently run on 12 volt, but as he starts understanding the basics of driving and i allow him some control from the car i will make sure to limit the top-speed dramatically and as he gets more used to it, more power (and batteries) can be added.

      • Track is the width, wheelbase is the length.
        If the car came with a seat belt changing it to a 3 or 4 point one makes no difference as far as roll bars are concerned.
        The general rule is, no roll bar = no seat belt,
        Roll bar = seat belt.
        To best route is to make sure the car can be thrown into a full lock at full speed and not turn over.
        Do this with the remote control and with something as heavy as your kid strapped high up on the seat, as in on a box on the seat, it it does turn over fix that problem first, a roll bar is there for disasters not to cover a bad design.
        Cheap battery drills are a good source of motor and gearbox, they’re cheap because the battery is rubbish so get 12 volt ones and make things easy.
        If I sound like the voice of experience it’s because I have 3 insane kids

  3. Your son will (physically) outgrow this toy in less than a year. It’s awesome what you have done, but putting your efforts into something that will stand the test of time would probably be more worthwhile.

    • Sizewise i think he could fit it another 2 years, seat moves back, all axles are being replaced now, barrings and suspension added and wheels that can take his future weight. The car will go eventually but the electronics will move on to the next project, maybe an electric bike when he is 5.

  4. Al welding is one of the trickier kinds, although I applaud your fortitude.

    consider using tube steel. its considerably cheaper, and unless you design your frame carefully, is not going to be much worst in strength to weight. you should start practicing with steel in any case to get used to the basics.

    the 200A welder is the arc current, which because its stepped down from the mains is around 1/10 that at the feed. idk what you ordered, but modern ones usually can draw power from just about anything, including a standard house plug if you keep the power low. if thats your source I would recommend a power strip with its own breaker to avoid undue wear on the panel breaker.

    if you do want to try aluminum, there are a few key points.

    the first is that since Al is a great conductor of heat, you need to heat up the whole piece to close to melting, then push the weld pool over the edge, and stop before the heat gets too great and the whole thing turns into slag. this means waiting quite a while with an arc or using a gas torch for preheat until it starts to go. and also that you need to move fast and stop for a little bit when they get too hot.

    the second is dump fill. because of the above, its very hard to maintain a small melt pool and a tiny clean weld. i find it helps to be very generous with the fill to keep the weld surface proud. i think it also has a little bit of a cooling function.

    thirdly, prepare the weld surfaces meticulously. since the stock you get is almost certainly oxidized, knock that off around the weld with abrasive sponge or steel wool.

    in the end, its best not to try to clean up the welds, Al abrasives are a whole separate thing than normal paper and files, which get clogged up really easily.

    since you seen to enjoy this kind of thing, I bet you’ll have a blast. not only is it fun, but welding can be pretty useful

    • Thanks for the suggestions. I am still considering steel, got both sticks and tig rods for it, both stainless and carbon steel just in case but really want to give alu a chance too. I try to read and see as much as possible to prime me, start with small pieces and see where i land.

      Thanks for all your advice.

      • yeah. you will definitely need to practice a bit first. 3/16 to 1/4 is a good starting size. 1/8 will just melt before you get a chance to weld it, and anything heavier will take a long time to get to temp.

        posting again because I forgot more advice. if it starts going bad (black contamination, excessive white oxide, porosity, base metal pulling away from the weld, punched out holes), just start again. trying to save a bad aluminum weld just seems to make it worse…not like steel where you can just back up, fill, reflow and keep going. i’ve spent 10 minutes of gas trying to salvage a bad aluminum join that ran just fine when i start over with clean edges.

        i’m sure one gets better at it with alot of practice, but you should really avoid it to start.

        oh, and the other thing about aluminum is that consistency takes more practice hours than steel or bronze. you can congratulate yourself on a nice clean looking weld, get cocky and screw up the next two.

        and as someone mentioned on HN, really look out for cracks. if the weld was too cold they form and spread and eventually cause a total joint failure.

    • I will try, have to say i am super happy about the interest from HN and leaving a drive to do better.

  5. Honestly I think you are going about this the wrong way. I would suggest starting off with a go kart body, and retrofitting a body to it. With the amount of power you want to give it, it going to continue to stress the gears and body.

    • The idea here was initially to just upgrade the engines a bit and toss it away when he grew older, but im aiming at moving this kit over with upgrades such as more batteries as he gets older.

  6. Hello dear, it is a very excellent working :) I had CLB084-4C controller (same as yours) but I dont know pinouts. If it is possible, please share pinouts of it with me.
    I think,
    CH + – >>> charger input
    B/M – F/M >>> front,back motor control
    L/M – R/M >>> left,right motor control

    but others I do not know what they used to be.
    CON2 >>> F+,V-,V2
    CON3 >>> V+,V1,IO,IF,IB,R/M
    CON4 >>> VR,Y3,VL,Y2,VR

    I need to know these pinouts for working on it.

    Please help me. Thank you.

  7. Pingback: Chris Mercedes GLA Ride on car – Part 1 | blog.ihackshit.com - Georgia 2600 Hackers irc.2600.net #GA2600

Leave a Reply to George Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *