Put yourself in the driver's seat with this officially licensed and fully functioning radio controlled Lamborghini Huracán. Capable of moving forward, left, right as well as in reverse and stopping, this 1:14 scale model features realistic paintwork and detailing. It is ultra-light with a crash-resistant body and is able to withstand bumps and knocks at speed.
HAPPY SHOPPING!!!
Latest comments (22)
TehJumpingJawa
19 Dec 16#22
Well..... as predicted, Tesco supplied 2 cars both tuned to 27.145MHz :disappointed:
The cars look great, so would rather not return them. I wonder if it's retuneable......
leeparsons
17 Dec 16#21
I knew that, makes sense Just wasnt sure what you was referring to at first glance.
TehJumpingJawa
17 Dec 16#20
Traditional RC operates at particular band & frequency.
In this country, either 27MHz band (13 frequencies), or 40MHz (35 frequencies).
If cars operate at the same frequency band(or close to it), they'll interfere.
More sophisticated RC vehicles support either manual, or automatic frequency/band hopping to avoid interference and allow multiple concurrent usage.
Simpler RC vehicles are hard wired for a single band, and have poor transmitters that flood many frequencies. This limits concurrent usage to a maximum of 2 devices, and requires the retailer to send one 27MHz vehicle & one 40MHz.
The transmitters on these do not appear to support frequency or band selection, and I very much doubt they have automatic hopping.
There is no packaging shown to indicate frequency and/or band. Thus there appears to be no way of knowing if two cars will run together or not.
leeparsons
17 Dec 16#19
Anyone know what is the fastest radio version then, and how fast does it go?
cb-uk
17 Dec 16#18
I think these were on sale at Halfrauds last year. If so, these are really high quality & excellent value.
leeparsons
17 Dec 16#17
not sure what your trying to say
everypennycounts
16 Dec 16#1
2 for £15 in argos
TehJumpingJawa to everypennycounts
17 Dec 16#16
I'm guessing these are all single, fixed frequency?
So no point buying both the Lambo and the Audi to be run together?
These cars are 2 for £30 @ Argos.
pompey87
16 Dec 16#2
It's wired controller, I got this and returned it as it'll get ripped in my house, ideal for the showcase though
TehJumpingJawa to pompey87
17 Dec 16#7
What do you mean wired controller? Is it not RC?!
leeparsons to pompey87
17 Dec 16#15
It does say the word radio.One wonders
jay-uk
17 Dec 16#13
Does anyone know what battery it takes?
TygerrTygerr to jay-uk
17 Dec 161#14
I *think* 5 AA in the car and 1 square 9v in the remote.
AadilF1
17 Dec 16#9
If this is made by Rastar then it's definitely worth it, their car models for RC cars are better than most diecast ones.
TygerrTygerr to AadilF1
17 Dec 16#12
It does appear to be, and they sell for multiple times this amount elsewhere. You have to find your own batteries with the Tesco version though.
Can't find a wired version anywhere, don't know what that's about.
There's also an Audi R8 for £7.26.
montana78
17 Dec 16#11
Description says radio controlled when googled. Have ordered so will find out tomorrow :smiley:
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Put yourself in the driver's seat with this officially licensed and fully functioning radio controlled Lamborghini Huracán. Capable of moving forward, left, right as well as in reverse and stopping, this 1:14 scale model features realistic paintwork and detailing. It is ultra-light with a crash-resistant body and is able to withstand bumps and knocks at speed.
HAPPY SHOPPING!!!
Latest comments (22)
The cars look great, so would rather not return them. I wonder if it's retuneable......
In this country, either 27MHz band (13 frequencies), or 40MHz (35 frequencies).
If cars operate at the same frequency band(or close to it), they'll interfere.
More sophisticated RC vehicles support either manual, or automatic frequency/band hopping to avoid interference and allow multiple concurrent usage.
Simpler RC vehicles are hard wired for a single band, and have poor transmitters that flood many frequencies. This limits concurrent usage to a maximum of 2 devices, and requires the retailer to send one 27MHz vehicle & one 40MHz.
The transmitters on these do not appear to support frequency or band selection, and I very much doubt they have automatic hopping.
There is no packaging shown to indicate frequency and/or band. Thus there appears to be no way of knowing if two cars will run together or not.
So no point buying both the Lambo and the Audi to be run together?
These cars are 2 for £30 @ Argos.
Can't find a wired version anywhere, don't know what that's about.
There's also an Audi R8 for £7.26.