影片說明
“What does ‘BASHER’ really mean?” Today’s video is a final REAL-WORLD ABUSE TEST between two RC jet boats built for rough water, rocks, jumps, and creek running.
After my ProBoat Jetstream (http://www.horizonhobby.com) suffered considerable damage during what I considered relatively light bashing conditions, many viewers accused me of making a “hit piece.” (Video: http://youtube.com/watch?v=EWXvEiRzVp4 ) So instead of arguing online, I decided to test another platform under even harsher conditions.
This is not about hate.
This is about expectations.
When “Ready for Anything” Meets Real Rocks, what actually survives?
To answer that, I took out my Streamline RC Thrasher (http://www.streamlinerc.com) and subjected it to:
• Roof drops onto rocks
• Cliff tosses
• Stair tumbles
• Extreme creek running in LESS water than where the Jetstream failed
No Flat Water. No Gentle Driving.
This Is What RC Bashing Looks Like.
The result?
One Boat Broke. One Boat Survived.
Now the question becomes:
“Built for Bashing… or Built for Looks?”
The Jetstream is absolutely beautiful on the water, and I say that honestly. But in my opinion, its durability did not align with the aggressive “basher” marketing language surrounding the platform. The Jetstream is for "light use", according to my 12 year old Son... so I take it from him.
Consumer Expectations Matter.
If a company markets a product as being ready for whitewater streams, jumps, and rough abuse, RC enthusiasts are naturally going to ask:
“Can It Survive What It Advertises?”
This video is not sponsored. I do not collect a commission from either company and I am not paid for this testing.
Just real testing, real rocks, and real consequences.
Marketing vs Reality.
Truth Through Testing.
Rocks Don’t Care About Marketing. 🤘
Enjoy the chaos. 🤘