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servo power

blak__jak

Senior Member
Messages
483
Location
amsterdam ohio
I've had different r/c's for more years than I care to remember but I have never directly powered the servos. I've read this can be done but electronics not being one of my strong points I have no idea how to go about it. anyone care to share how it's done. pics would be great. thanks
 

Motakitty

Senior Member
Messages
441
Theres three wires coming from the servo to receiver + - and signal (orange on hitecs) you leave the signal wire alone but make the +,- go from the battery to the servo so all thats left going to the receiver is the signal. Typically the battery powers the reciever then powers the servos. But with the gas trucks theres no esc so no bec so whatever voltage you give the receiver the servos get too. As long as your electronics can handle the voltage you want you don't really have to go through the trouble of powering the servos directly. On an electric car if you want to power the servos directly then an external bec is what you'd want to look into since the esc has an internal bec that powers everything.

Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2
 
G

Guest

Guest
Here ya go. This is how I do mine.

 
G

Guest

Guest
That is a micro splitter, sold by KillerRC. Is is like several Y splitters in one tiny package.
 

Motakitty

Senior Member
Messages
441
Wouldn't the receiver act as a splitter since the battery is plugged directly to it
 
G

Guest

Guest
The whole idea of that direct wire setup is to keep the amp load out of the receiver. It's a safeguard to protect the receiver.
 

Big Pitt

Junior Member
Messages
3
Location
Brussels/BELGIUM
It seems that with your micro splinter you separete +/- and signal just for the throttle... Everything else seems to go directly to the splinter...

So where's the difference with a connection to the RX?
 
G

Guest

Guest
Hits the splitter first. The signal wire gets separated from the servo plug and that goes to the receiver.

Some people will run the smaller throttle servo through the receiver. On my 5ive I directed wired all servos and just had the servo signal wire go into the receiver. Just keep in mind that at least one power source needs to power the receiver.
 

Motakitty

Senior Member
Messages
441
Sorry I don't want to come across as annoying but rcdad with that splitter I see the battery power still goess to the receiver. Oh never mind I just thought by removing the servos from the receiver it takes the amp draw away from it. I was thinking you just wanted to take the amp draw from the battery away but it takes the load from the servos off the rx. Opps :banghead:
 
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Guest

Guest
Your getting it.

The receiver still needs power to operate. The idea is to just keep the servo usage going from the battery straight to the servos.
 

vpalace

Senior Member
Messages
262
Location
PA
This all pertains to an electric vehicle correct? You don't have to with about this in a gasser right?
 
G

Guest

Guest
This is for the gassers.

In the electrics you can use a BEC for your servos.
 

vpalace

Senior Member
Messages
262
Location
PA
Could this be why my steering servo caught on fire or could it have been because the endpoints and dual rates weren't properly set. I checked and they were straining at full turn. I'm sure they heated up quite a bit doing that.
 
G

Guest

Guest
vpalace said:
Could this be why my steering servo caught on fire or could it have been because the endpoints and dual rates weren't properly set. I checked and they were straining at full turn. I'm sure they heated up quite a bit doing that.
Yes. If the servo is still pushing after the travel stops they heat up and burn out real quick.
 

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