KellyC
Rock Stacker
John,
They are showing out of stock on your site.
Any ETA on the next batch?
They are showing out of stock on your site.
Any ETA on the next batch?
There are a couple of questions for you on the previous page John
There are a couple of questions for you on the previous page John
Yeah, I moved it around quite a bit, Its not glued in..
I think shortening the wires is something many others would be interested in, Not sure why you are trying to shut down this idea..
Glad you are happy with your servo tho .. Nice to see more people jumping on board ..
Ugly crimps ??
I've seen boards that were able to lift out, So I know its not impossible.
Its like apple moving connectors on their later iphones to the bottom of the PCB to deter people from fixing their own phones..
Its my phone, If I void my warranty, You wont have to honor it, What the hell do you care at that point?
Its not like we aren't capable of using soldering irons.. ( maybe some people aren't up to the task.. )
Hell a better suggestion than using shitty crimps, that are just a point of failure.. Is to buy new connectors and just cut/add them onto the end of the cable...
Seems like a silly purchase when I could just shorten the lead and resolder it like I do with every ESC I ever have. Which btw CASTLE has never denied my warranty for. :/
Nowhere does it say the owner must condone modding ( voiding ) the servo.. Period.
Telling somebody something is possible is not the same as suggesting they do it.
Get it now?
Hell a better suggestion than using shitty crimps, that are just a point of failure.. Is to buy new connectors and just cut/add them onto the end of the cable...
I think you're misunderstanding me. I'm not saying use crimp connectors...I'm saying buy a servo terminal crimping tool. Cut your cables to length...crimp on new pins, install new connector....done. Without having to open the servo. I've done it this way for quadcopters/drones and it looks clean and professional.
I know your method would get the same result if completed correctly and doesn't require a new tool, but someone inexperienced in soldering could apply too much heat to the board, use an iron thats too hot and fry the board, could burn off the pads, etc etc.
The crimper way, you cut to the desired length...trim wire cover...install new connector and bam done. No risk of ruining the board.
You do realize nearly all servo connectors are crimped on right?
Dont do that , Act like you dont know exactly what I was talking about..
Nowhere does it say the owner must condone modding ( voiding ) the servo.. Period.
Telling somebody something is possible is not the same as suggesting they do it.
Get it now?