LawlessMan
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2005
- Messages
- 333
This question is for anyone running a ServoCity gearbox in a gas outboard tunnel. Although the latest gearboxes have programmable digital servos that will operate on 7.2v
Li-Po packs, the original servo gearboxes used analog servos that operated on 6 volts. Many people had no trouble with them. but over time, some of the analog servos developed dead spots from holding the servo in one place for relatively long periods of time, like the length of time it took to go down the straightaway from buoy 3 to 4. I also know some people have replaced their analog servos with digital servos, like SAVOX and other brands. This change basically eliminated the internally mounted potentiometer which had been taken out of the servo case and replaced with an external one mounted on the bottom of the output shaft and hard-wired back to the servo. My question is: What effect, if any, did this have on the steering of the boat? Did it cause over-steering or any other problem associated with the "loss" of the direct feedback of the external pot? Are transmitter "end point" settings being used to adjust the servo travel, or, prehaps, are external programming methods being used to reduce the travel? I am sure that there are still several of the older style gearboxes in use that may develop, or may have already developed the dead spot problem, causing erratic steering. Anyone care to offer some feedback on this issue?
Thank you,
Fred, the Lawless guy.
Li-Po packs, the original servo gearboxes used analog servos that operated on 6 volts. Many people had no trouble with them. but over time, some of the analog servos developed dead spots from holding the servo in one place for relatively long periods of time, like the length of time it took to go down the straightaway from buoy 3 to 4. I also know some people have replaced their analog servos with digital servos, like SAVOX and other brands. This change basically eliminated the internally mounted potentiometer which had been taken out of the servo case and replaced with an external one mounted on the bottom of the output shaft and hard-wired back to the servo. My question is: What effect, if any, did this have on the steering of the boat? Did it cause over-steering or any other problem associated with the "loss" of the direct feedback of the external pot? Are transmitter "end point" settings being used to adjust the servo travel, or, prehaps, are external programming methods being used to reduce the travel? I am sure that there are still several of the older style gearboxes in use that may develop, or may have already developed the dead spot problem, causing erratic steering. Anyone care to offer some feedback on this issue?
Thank you,
Fred, the Lawless guy.