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  • maddox10
    replied
    Still looks good tough, and we measured our 28-36 @16 amps 3S with burned rubber smell.
    Those el cheapo motors and speedo's seem to deliver.

    Leave a comment:


  • Liftoff
    replied
    Yep its a trackstar SC120, reverse is at about 80% speed but brother said he can fix that, I think its as you said Mario through the transmitter - but I wouldn't know as I'm totally useless when it comes to electrics!

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  • maddox10
    replied
    That's a Trackstar if I'm not mistaken.

    If so,
    With the programming card you can set about anything, but 1 thing will have to be done with the transmitter, setting the reverse @100%.

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  • Liftoff
    replied
    If you give it a full fwd and then a full rev, the motor from full fwd will go to dead stop, to go to rev you have to repeat the rev input. That said we still have to program the ESC as I forgot place the programming card on the order. I'm not much into electrics and electronics, that's my brother's job...I only understand gears, metal and grease!
    Through the whole test the esc and motor did not heat up or anything...

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  • Mouldy
    replied
    How does the esc handle full forward straight to full reverse?

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  • Liftoff
    replied
    Good news

    In the afternoon spent a couple of hours with my brother setting up the gearbox and testing it - results are encouraging for now. The motor spins freely, no abnormal loading on the motor.

    After ''running in'' the boxes we decided to load it a bit to see what happens, so I connected a 1/4" extension to the output shaft and held it in a keyless chuck (like in the photo a couple of posts above). The motor stalled so we increased throttle slowly...I was expecting something to fail but it didn't, the 1/4 extension started slipping inside the chuck.

    Loctite 603 doing its job very well in keeping those gears glued on their shafts!

    The only flaw I noticed till now is that the large gear on the output shaft wobbles a little bit...

    Here are a couple of vid clips from this afternoon : Warning! its quite noisy!!



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  • Liftoff
    replied
    Well tbh I did use a pillar drill for the plate holes, and a lathe to machine the output shaft

    This afternoon I'm trying to rig it up and give it a go...and a video clip if all goes well!
    Last edited by Liftoff; 23 February 2014, 10:55. Reason: Let me see how it runs David, and then depending on the results, I'll post how and what tools I used.

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  • daveimi
    replied
    Is there any chance of getting a run through of how you got it so accurate with hand tools?

    There is hope that mere mortals may be able to make something like this!

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  • overkill
    replied
    For a gearbox made with just hand tools, that is fantastic work.

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  • Mouldy
    replied
    looks good!

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  • Liftoff
    replied
    Gearboxes almost ready now. Have not tried them out with the motor yet, but they turn freely by hand. Had to do some modifications to the original design, namely introducing thrust washers to reduce gear rubbing on the side plates. Looks good enough though, considering its a precision part manufactured using hand tools a lathe milling combi would have come very useful! will have to wait a bit more for that...
    Will try to find some time tomorrow to couple the motor to the box and give it a go...hoping it will stay in one piece - fingers crossed!

    20140222_130223[1].jpg20140222_140743[1].jpg20140222_141635[1].jpg

    Leave a comment:


  • Liftoff
    replied
    Could be they are different materials then, as I did face it with a carbide insert. I needed the gear 5mm wide so I cut it off with a Dremel type cut-off disc, no problems there either.
    Good choice of drill on that website, thanks...

    Leave a comment:


  • overkill
    replied
    Ah, now your gear looks exactly like mine. I used drills like this: http://www.mcmaster.com/#standard-drill-bits/=ql6bw5 and I am sure you can find the same thing locally in the UK or Europe. I tried facing one of these gears and only succeeded in ruining a carbide insert.

    Leave a comment:


  • Liftoff
    replied
    Originally posted by overkill View Post
    My gears look different to the ones in your photo; they have a surface finish that couldn't have come from any milling or turning method I know of
    Originally they looked like this:

    HPI gear.jpg
    I couldn't drill through it at that stage so I turned it on a lathe and cut a new face, that took the hardened piece off and I could just about drill it.
    What type of drills did you get Nick, there are loads of different shapes carbide drills around! What worked for you?

    Leave a comment:


  • overkill
    replied
    My gears look different to the ones in your photo; they have a surface finish that couldn't have come from any milling or turning method I know of and they were definitely hard all the way thru. Your gears would probably benefit from the carbide drills as well; I had the lathe set for 200 rpm and used a slow feed as I don't have and data for working sintered steel with carbide. The gears only got slightly warm.

    Leave a comment:

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