Cliff Lett Explained

Cliff Lett
Birth Name:Clifton Bradley Lett
Birth Date:18 September 1957
Birth Place:Long Beach, California
Nationality:American
Occupation:Radio-controlled racer
Hobby industry executive
Motorcycle mechanic
Employer:Yamaha
Associated Electrics

Clifton Bradley Lett (born September 18, 1957) is an American retired radio-controlled racer and former president of Associated Electrics, where he began his R/C career in 1985. A former motorcross mechanic for Yamaha (particularly for Ricky Johnson), he won seven ROAR National Championships, three NORRCA National Championships and the 1991 IFMAR World Championship and was one of the foremost drivers of the 1980s. Lett, known as "the Buggymaster",[1] helped refine the Associated RC10 and other models in the range. He was the first driver to exceed 100mph with a radio-controlled car, recorded by Guinness World Records at 111mph in 2001.

Early life

Lett spent most of his youth in Los Altos. From age 12 to 15, he raced BMX bikes and was part of the Matthews Motocross team with Scot Breithaupt (his best friend's cousin). Lett competed in motocross and played baseball in high school, giving up baseball for a career in motocross.

Shortly after his mother died of cancer, Lett gave up racing and was a mechanic for Yamaha's amateur and semi-pro riders.[2] He became Ricky Johnson's personal mechanic in 1983, when Johnson negotiated a contract enabling Lett to work with him; their partnership ended after the 1985 season when Johnson moved to Honda. Lett then helped develop engines and suspensions; in his last year with Yamaha, he worked in research and development of YZ motorcycles.[2]

Radio-controlled career

Lett entered the radio-controlled hobby with a gasoline-powered airplane, bringing it on tour and flying as time permitted.[2] His first radio-controlled car was an Associated RC12E.[3] During Lett's travels, he raced the car in parking lots until rider Johnny O'Mara destroyed it by driving it under a moving car. In November 1984, after watching an off-road race on a business trip, he bought a Cox Tomahawk at Hobby Shack and won his first race. When Lett became a mechanic, he worked away from home on weekends and in the office during the week; racing became less frequent until 1986, when he began working in research and development.[3]

When he came across an event near Whittier, California in 1985, Lett was introduced to racer Jay Halsey and contacted Associated Electrics executives Mike Reedy, Roger Curtis and Gene Husting.[4] In April 1988,[3] when a position became available in Team Associated's research and development department,[5] he became a product-development manager.[4] The RC10 had begun to show its age, and Lett helped make the car competitive again.[4] [6]

Racing career

At the, Team Associated had built a series of new RC10s for the 2WD class weeks before and had little time to prepare. After a poor practice performance with two practice days left, Lett split the team into groups of three and four; one group focused on front-end development, a second on rear-end development and a third on tires.[7] The arrangement succeeded, and Masami Hirosaka won his second IFMAR 2WD world championship.[8] [9] [10] [11]

In the 4WD class Lett qualified his Yokomo YZ-10 in sixth place, despite losing his fastest qualifying time for failing to marshal a round after his. He fought out the first leg of the A-Main (the finals that claims the championship title) with Hirosaka, who held the lead in the five-minute round until he made an error which allowed Lett to win. In the second leg, as Hirosaka made mistakes which left him in fourth place and reduced his chances of contending for the championship, Lett tried to fend off Jack Johnson's Kyosho Lazer ZX-R. He rolled his car on the seventh lap, enabling Johnson to pass, and finished second. In the final leg, Lett needed to finish third or better to secure the title. After an error by Johnson, he and Hirosaka were the only remaining contenders. With the lowest points deducted from each driver's final score, they were tied; their lowest scores were used to break the tie. Hirosaka's fifth-place finish in the second leg was lower than Lett's second, and Lett was declared champion.[12]

Record attempt

Lett's Team Associated RC10L3O
Category:PRO 10
Constructor:Associated Electrics
Designer:Cliff Lett
Team:Team Associated
Drivers:Cliff Lett
Electric Motor:2T Aveox brushless
Electric Motor Position:rear-mounted
Battery:24 2/3A cells NiCad
Weight:21001NaN1

Before Lett's attempt, the fastest recorded time——was set by Audi Sports in Finland. By 2001, George M. Gonzalez of Radio Control Car Action claimed that a car with a .21 (3.5cc) glow-plug engine was capable of that speed. That year Steve Pond reached with his HPI Super Nitro RS4, as recorded for Radio Control Nitro magazine with a radar gun. R/C drag-racing champion Chris Collins reportedly reached at the Northstar Dragway in Minnesota, and record-breaking speeds were reached in organized events at the Olympic Velodrome at California State University; however, none were certified and the Finnish record stood.[13]

Lead designer Lett[14] attempted a new record on January 13, 2001, aiming to exceed over a two way pass with the help of Team Associated, promoter Dan Moynihan and Irwindale Speedway. He used a modified TC3 and a RC10L3O, the latter adapted to accommodate an Aveox sensorless brushless motor designed for aircraft[13] and fed by 24 sub-C NiCad batteries.[14] The body was a 1/10 version of a Nissan P35 by Protoform, modified to reduce drag. Further modification was made over five days to prevent the body from deforming at speed, adding a wing from a 1/10 buggy for increased downforce and straightaway stability.[13] [14]

To certify the record, Lett needed a Guinness World Records representative at the event or its recording by Guinness World Records Primetime. Although Moynihan encouraged the show's producers to attend, its film crew pulled out at the last minute. An ABC News crew recorded the event, with a speed of read on a Stalker police-radar gun. The event was broadcast on television, and video footage and radar data were submitted to Guinness.[13]

The TC3, built to break Audi's record with a production-based vehicle, had a NASCAR-style Dodge Intrepid body and 14 batteries. It reached the high 80s and low 90s, until Mike Reedy built a motor enabling it to reach .[13]

Lett was the first driver to exceed with a radio-controlled car,[15] according to Guinness World Records.[16] He held the record until it was broken by Nic Case in 2006 at, and in 2014 Case was the first to reach .[15] [17]

Recognition

With Joel Johnson, Gil Losi, Jr. and Jay Halsey, Lett is considered by Radio Control Car Action Steve Pond as one of the 1980s' star drivers[18] and he was cited as an inspiration by Ricky Johnson.[19] In Radio Control Car Action annual top-10 poll, Lett was listed twice (in 1989[5] and 1993)[1] on its Best R/C Drivers list.

R/C racing summary

Bold in results indicates top qualifier.

IFMAR world championship results

YearResultClassVenueCarMotorSourceReport
1987align=center style="background:#;"141:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDRomseyAssociated RC10report
1987align=center style="background:#"41:10 Electric Off-Road 4WDRomseySchumacher CAT XLReedy Rouge
1989align=center style="background:#;"31:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDAssociated RC10GXreport
1989align=center style="background:#"41:10 Electric Off-Road 4WDYokomo YZ-10
1991align=center style="background:#;"1:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDAssociated RC10GXreport
1991align=center style="background:#"11:10 Electric Off-Road 4WDYokomo YZ-10
1995align=center style="background:#;"71:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDAssociated RC10Breport
1996align=center style="background:#"1:8 IC Off-RoadKyosho Inferno MP5report
1997align=center style="background:#;"321:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDreport
1997align=center style="background:#"271:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD

ROAR national championship results

YearResultClassVenueCarMotorSourceReport
1988align=center style="background:#"11:10 Oval 4WDreport
1988align=center style="background:#"11:10 Off-Road Stock 4WDreport
1988align=center style="background:#;"11:10 Electric Off-Road 2WDreport
1988align=center style="background:#"1:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD
1989align=center style="background:#;"31:10 Electric Off-Road 2WD[20] [21] report
1989align=center style="background:#"41:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD
1990align=center style="background:#;"11:10 Electric Off-Road 2WD[22] report
1990align=center style="background:#"11:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD
1992align=center style="background:#;"1:10 Electric Off-Road 2WD
1992align=center style="background:#"11:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD
align=center style="background:#"271:8 IC Off-Road
1991align=center style="background:#;"321:10 Electric Off-Road 2WD
1991align=center style="background:#"271:10 Electric Off-Road 4WD-->

External links

Notes and References

  1. May 1993. Top 10 . Radio Control Car Action . . 56 .
  2. Arita . Derek . November 1989. Interview: Cliff Lett . Radio Control Model Cars . 27 January 2016.
  3. Masi . Frank . November 1991 . Car Action Interview: Cliff Lett . Radio Control Car Action . . 129–132 .
  4. Hyndman . Carl . January 2016 . Cliff Lett on the RC10 and Radio Control, Then and Now . Radio Control Car Action . . 73–74 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151222103243/http://www.rccaraction.com/blog/2015/12/09/interview-cliff-lett-discusses-the-iconic-rc10-and-radio-control-then-now/ . 2015-12-22 . dead .
  5. May 1989 . Ten Best R/C Drivers . Radio Control Car Action . . 51 .
  6. Web site: RC10Talk.com - View topic - Podcast with Cliff regarding "Stealth". 1 January 2016.
  7. Web site: Inside Story on the RC10. TeamAssociated.com. 15 January 2016.
  8. Chaplin . Keith . 1991 1/10 Off-Road World Championships . Radio Race Car . . Traplet Publications . October 1991 . 22 November 2015 .
  9. Blandin . Christophe . November 1991 . Come Back to Detroit . fr . Auto 8 . . Editions Larivière . 72 .
  10. Delapierre . David . 1991 . Hirosaka: Les Deux Poles et Champion en 4x2! . Hirosaka: The Two Poles and Champion of 4x2 . fr . RCM . . Editions Loisirs Techniques .
  11. Husting . Gene . 1991 . 1991 Off-Road IFMAR World . Radio Control Model Cars . 22 November 2015 .
  12. Pond . Steve . December 1991 . 1991 IFMAR World Champs . Radio Control Car Action . . .
  13. Gonzalez . George M. . May 2001 . The Need for Speed: Behind the scenes at Associated's "Guinness Book" speed record attempt . Radio Control Car Action . . 129 . 1 January 2016 .
  14. Speed Demons. Jeffrey M. O'Brien. 1 March 2003. WIRED. 4 January 2016.
  15. Web site: FLASHBACK FRIDAY: Cliff Lett sets Guinness World Record for Fastest RC Car. LiveRC.com. 1 January 2016.
  16. Book: Folkard, Claire . 1 August 2002 . Guinness World Records 2003 . Guinness World Records Limited . 141 . 9781892051172 . registration .
  17. Web site: World Record! Nic Case Breaks the 200mph Barrier. RC Car Action. 1 January 2016. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20161206191150/http://www.rccaraction.com/blog/2014/10/29/world-record-nic-case-breaks-the-200mph-barrier/. 6 December 2016.
  18. Pond . Steve . November 1990 . Masami's Yokomo . 56 . . . .
  19. Web site: MY MOTOCROSS INSPIRATIONS BY RICK JOHNSON. Motocross Action Magazine. 2 January 2016.
  20. David . Wally . December 1989 . 1989 ROAR Off-Road Nationals . Radio Control Car Action . . 1 January 2016 .
  21. Husting . Gene . November 1989 . 1989 ROAR Offroad Championship . Radio Control Model Cars . 1 January 2016 .
  22. Lee . Mike . December 1990 . ROAR Off-Road Nats . Radio Control Car Action . . 100–106 .