Released late last month this mouth watering new drifter from Yokomo is based on a new chassis design by Yokomo’s own Suzuki Hiroshi.
Of exceptional note for the 4WD drift car is the new dual center slipper clutch which allows an individual balance of power to the rear and front axle possible. This allows the front and rear wheels to spin at different speeds (See the video below) allowing the driver to pull of some pretty exceptional rolling burn-off moves! This is an RC drifters dream come true!
Add the increased steering angle and you have a great chassis for counter steer drift style. The clutch allows easy setup for different surfaces.
The use of saddle pack-batteries and the centered motor position give an even balance to the chassis for better control.
Yokomo D-Max Special Specifications
- Shaft drive 4WD
- Viewer carbon upper and lower chassis decks
- Adjustable dual clutch
- Ackermann optimized for counter steer drifting
- Improved front knuckles
- Alu suspension arm mount
- Alu oil damper
- Alu special motor mount
- Alu upper arm tie-rod
- Length: 387mm
- Width: 198mm
- Wheelbase: 258mm
- Internal gear ratio: 2.35/1
- Weight (without body): 1420g

Yokomo have a full range of 1/10th drift kits based on their moulded tub chassis, the race-bred MR-4TC SD, a 4WD shaft driven platform, and these new 1/16th additions are a chip off the old block. Little drifters are perfect for when you want to get sideways but haven’t a full car park or race track to play on. A basement, office floor or living room can be transformed into a full drift section where you can dice with friends and get your kicks sideways.
Just like the 1/10th Yokomo Drifters, hard drift rings sit within hard compound rubber tyres so the looks are complete but the grip level is low enough to drift on virtually any surface, indoors or out. Unlike their
Each hub carrier also wears a simulated disc brake with gold plated brake calliper for extra realism, you can see through the rotating spokes to the static calliper behind and it looks super cool for sure! The steering system uses a cross link and parallel arm to mimic the steering servo saver on the other side, keeping the upper arm parallel at all times for symmetrical steering angles. All you need is a radio system, drive battery and charger, plus a steering servo and speed controller, though nothing extreme is required, racing gear would be way too extreme for drifting. The steering puts no load on the servo so the speed and torque never gets taken to the limit, though if anything the speed is more important than the torque, allowing you to correct a slide or catch a spin before it happens.






