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#1
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Hi all. Im thinking of using a servo to raise / lower my tamiya landing legs with a self centering on/off/on toggle switch and battery,
Does anyone know of a good servo that will hold in the down position and not creep up like they normally do when the landing legs are down or the trailer has some weight on it as this is going to be use with a A trailer ? Cheers Tracy
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RIP FreddyGearDrive 2-12-59/12-19-11 Love my Kenworths To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. |
#2
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I'm unfamiliar with how the gearing is setup in the landing legs, but I would think a standard size continuous rotation servo should work. You would have to find some way to connect the servo to the gear train. If you could maybe get some images of the gearing. I would be glad to help you find a way get the servo to work.
Shawn |
#3
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You can't just hook the servo up to an on/off switch and have it work. The servo needs to see a signal to tell it what to do so right off the bat you'll need a servo controller unless of course you pull the circuit board out of the servo and wire directly into the motor. The other as mentioned is you'll need a continuous rotation servo. Standard servo's have built in stops in the case as well as the potentiometer that sends info back to the board to tell it where the servo output is.
My question is why do you want to use a servo over the standard motor/gearbox that comes with the kit. What I'm looking at doing with one my trailers is possibly trying out some firgelli actuators as the legs for the landing gear. |
#4
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AKA "00" Biddle RIP FreddyGearDrive 2-12-59/12-19-11 |
#5
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Pull the gears, remove the stops, done. The pot and circuit board get removed, then wire direct to the motor...continuous rotation servo. I've made them for my crawlers that way, but the motor is controlled via 3 way switch (fwd,neu,rev) on the radio going through a winch controller.
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#6
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The reason I was looking at using a servo is I dont need the rest of the crap that comes in a Tamiya motorized landing leg kit eg the tuntable base & 5th wheel parts and the skid plate parts that activate the landing legs as this is getting use on a FGD A trailer chassis and the bass plate sits about 5mm from the bottom of the trailer floor.
And was thinking of raising then via a linkage going though a servo horn on the servo that connects to the inner legs .... Cheers Tracy
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RIP FreddyGearDrive 2-12-59/12-19-11 Love my Kenworths To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. |
#7
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You might be able to recover some of the cost of the legs kit if you offer up for sale all the parts you don't need? Possible somebody might at least want the 5th wheel parts even without the trailer parts... Last edited by ricm; 10-20-2015 at 08:11 PM. |
#8
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Tracy,
If you are wanting to manually control the servo, then maybe you could use a basic servo tester to operate the servo..?? Like this.. http://hobbyking.com/hobbyking/store...vo_Tester.html Change out the rotary pot for a switch, and the servo tester should move the servo up and down, and HOLD it in the set position (either up or down).. A on/off/on switch would be a good idea to help save some battery power when the legs are up.. The only extra thing that you would need to do is add a battery pack to run the servo tester.. Mark.. |
#9
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