Anyone having trouble with the flaps not going down smoothly? When I actuate the flaps they chatter on the way down. I don't believe its my receiver I wonder if it could be the blue box?
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Could be. Plug them in one at a time (if you can) into a servo tester and run them through their range of travel and see if you can reproduce it.Originally posted by boomer108 View PostAnyone having trouble with the flaps not going down smoothly? When I actuate the flaps they chatter on the way down. I don't believe its my receiver I wonder if it could be the blue box?
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Here is the battery I use in my OV-10, from Amazon 1 ZEEE 7200ma 4 cell 80-100c, and price is reasonable. Zeee 4S 14.8V 7200mAh 80C RC LiPo Battery Hard Case with EC5 Connector. Reduces the weight overall, and replaced the motors with a 5 for $42.00 deal I found on Amazon...Drop-in replacements, and changed to the Tigercat Props, with their hardware. KV rating of 920. The motors are branded "Exceed". Amazing change to the available power. It flies like it should have from the start....It is a half trottle plane now, with plenty of overhead. Bronco Mike
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What do you mean by "squirrelly". Do you mean the infamous tail wag as you are coming out of a banked turn? If that's the case, all you need is the simplest, cheapest gyro to get this plane to fly solid. Something like a HobbyEagle A3-L or Freewing gyro. You don't need to have an extra channel to switch it on or off or to have the ability to control the master gain on a knob (extra channel needed). Fly the plane and have it trimmed as well as you can, then you install the gyro in the proper manner and start very conservatively with the rate gain pot set low (say ~25% of its full travel). The heading gain should be set to zero on this plane. When no leads are plugged in to control "mode" or master gain, it's just ON all the time. After you do your first flight to make sure the gain is OK and the plane doesn't do anything weird like oscillating in any axis at full speed, land it and turn the gain pot up just a hair (say to ~30%). Take it up again and do a fast pass, if no oscillation occurs (and you'll see the oscillation on the roll axis first), land and again turn it up a hair. Continual to do this until you see aileron oscillation, slow down immediately and land, dial back the gain just a tiny bit and it's all set and good to go for the rest of the time you fly this plane as is.Originally posted by Mad Baron View PostI flew my OV10 today and it flew good but it was squirrely I'm thinking I need to put an gyro in it to see if it will help with the flight quality. Its been a long time since I installed a gyro but I only have a 6 channel radio and every channel is being used.
However, if you mean it's doing something else when you say squirrelly, you'll have to describe it better. In terms of roll and pitch axis, this plane flies very well. It just could use a bit of a "yaw damper" like in some of the big airliner jets to control the tail waggle a bit.
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I am using a Horus 10X and a S6R which makes a big difference between when the stabilization is on or off. With it on, it flys smoother in the turns and thats just with the rudder gains set to use as a yaw dampner. Gyro help on yaw axis is highly recommended and its 13 mins of enjoyable flying on box stock config.
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The pin is just a short piece of piano wire. I pried the latch out of the wing, split it in two and the little post has a set screw on it, undo the set screw and use the old pin to measure a slightly longer one and then reverse for install. I think I put pictures in the thread on RCG but maybe here too.
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I need a 8 channel radio to operate the gyro.
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