Or you could just use bigger wires to the motors like I've been saying for months :lol:
Or you could just use bigger wires to the motors like I've been saying for months :lol:
I thought about that but I could never find an orientation that I felt would keep them out of harms way to my satisfaction. That's also a bit higher up than I want them. The TVP would pull heat but I think my sinks and skid will pull a bit more heat. We just woke up and you're about to head to bed I'm assuming. That always trips me out.
J
That skid plate came out awesome. The heat sinks are very cool also. Are they made out of 7075? I thought so! Thanks for your help the other night.
Love coming to this thread. Each time I do there is something spectacular going on. Nice work on the skid and the heat sinks Joel."thumbsup"
Sounds kinky.
I presume all the FETs are on just one side. When you were bench testing for temperature, did it seem like most all the heat was being generated on just that side?
Joel...something else I'd be curious to see is the effect of a 4S battery with the same setup as 3S. In other words I think it'd be interesting to see how running an identical layout on 4S would pan out. From what I understand the 4S should allow the ESC's to run slightly cooler, as well as enhancing motor control...better low speed control and such.
Just a thought since it looks like you'll be doing another round of "fingering" things out...
4s would only reduce ESC heat if the motor wind was increased to keep wheelspeed the same. 4s would increase heat on the internal BEC, so without mitigation of that component it could actually increase system heat.
This is intense! I have slowly been moving things around in my rig and at this point all my electronics are back in the chassis. The convenience far outweighs the minor weight gain in the chassis. I have been considering "unsmashing" and with your recent observations I think you've convinced me it's time?
Be careful when you blast hot electronics with a cooling spray. The thermal shock can kill transistors and delaminate components. Bring it on slow and from afar at first. The #1 killer of waterproof escs is thermal shock when they hit water.
When I built my axles I ensured my servo pressed into the front. Now instead of the servo going nuclear, the entire front of the rig (axles, tranny, knuckles etc) acts as a heat sink. I have way fewer servo motor problems than with my old rig. J
Hmmm. I go thru lots of servos. I wonder if a piece of heavy copper foil between the bottom of the servo and servo plate, sticking out 1" on three sides would pull some heat out of there? Assuming I can find some copper foil.
Not sure how much it'd help pulling heat from one side. My setup is still not optimal pulling heat from only three sides. If you don't try it you'll never know.
J
Agreed. I already have some 22ga copper sheet on the way. The servo cases have built-in metal heat sinks exposed to air on three sides. But the bottom (on mine) is clamped down to CF, an insulator. It's heat from the insulated bottom I hope to extract. We'll see. Thanx for the inspiration.