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#41
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I put 4mm banana plugs on the esc - motor, also 4mm males on the power feed, as my battery is 4mm females.
I put them on the motor/esc for 2 reasons, the first is i can swap it to another car easier and the second, it's easier to swap 2 motor wires over if the motor runs in reverse. Do you get a voltage/current drop with connectors? One at a time when cutting battery wires, dead shorts and lipo's don't mix! |
#42
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Back in the days of nicd I heard some people used to solder the esc to the battery before each race to avoid the use of plugs due to losing performance
Not sure how they charged them lol, maybe it was BS and certainly not worth the effort for us mortals |
#43
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I've never heard of that one, I'm way to impatient for anything like that!
I used to cut the tamiya plugs off and use the banana connectors even back then, but tbh, anything hotter than a silver can and those tamiya connectors melted anyway. Once I can finish a race meeting, and carry my car back in one piece each time, then I might worry about voltage drops and ohms law.🤔 |
#44
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yeah not wrecking a car is usually a good days racing
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#45
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TBH if I'd been any good at soldering back then I'd have done anything to reduce losses.
In an 8 car heat you could count on at least 2 cars either stopping completely on the last lap, or just getting really really really slow......... Usually me. |
#46
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I used too run with some serious racers back in the day, I'm well into my 40s now and have been racing since the very early 80s, and I do remember the good old days of 1700 nicd, then progressing too nimh, water dipping silver cans, and brushed motors. at one point I do remember it being popular amongst the power obsessed (the very top guys) soldering straight up too batteries. But with modern lipos and the power of motors right now, dumping isn't something that you have to worry about any more. this looks like a really good start up. Never be afraid to ask a question of any sort there are no dumb questions only dumb answers.
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#47
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So.....
I started to put it all together tonight and it has not been straight forward. The servo arms I have are too big, looks like I need a smaller one as I can't get any combination of servo position/arm to work. The connector for the ESC does not fit the RX I have, everything else does but not that. However it might with the subtle use of a sharp knife to remove the excess casing on it. Hmmmmm. Not as successful as I had hoped, but it's a race not a sprint! |
#48
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Daft question but the speedo connector going to the receiver are you putting it in the right way?
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#49
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Servos
My tuppence. All modern 2wd will fit a normal size servo. Do not buy a low profile servo unless you like stripping gears and shelling out more money. They are great for Touring cars with enclosed wheels but not for buggies!!!
__________________
Yokomo YZ2's. CaL2 and DTM2. Kyosho lazer zx Cat 2000 RC10 Worlds RC10 B3 Cougar 2's Topcat Tamiya DT02 - use as a door stop. Tamiya TL01 - paper weight. Tamiya Mini - awesome fun to race THR - Tudor-Hart Racing - Custom RC products - find us on Facebook. SHRCCC Committee Member- Track features - design and build. Returning racer after 25 year break - miss my Optima Mid Custom Special, but not brushed motors & SCE cells. www.shrccc.co.uk |
#50
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Quote:
Either way I need to get smaller cables anyway. Both the servo and ESC are only an inch away from the RX but have about a foot of cable on them. Will worry about that after I get it all running first. I am getting there and enjoying the experience after 25 odd years. |
#51
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Quote:
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#52
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Just been looking online, can you buy short cables for the ESC-RX? I can't find any, just extenders!
Also, what's the best way to shorten the servo cable? At the connector end or unsolder inside the servo and resolder after resizing it? |
#53
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Depends what the servo is, you can take off the bottom of some and solder on a new wire, or cut it down and re-solder. Depends how much you like your warranty as i suspect either way will invalidate it. |
#54
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Thanks, I will open it up and make a decision, I thought that was probably the easiest way.
Thanks for the link. |
#55
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Tie wraps
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