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-   -   Another Quark Question part II (https://www.rc-monster.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3553)

neweuser 07.14.2006 05:36 PM

Another Quark Question part II
 
Ok, so i received it. A few Questions. How many sub c's can it handle first off. Second off, looking at this thing..do i need to pull a "jumper" to run a ubec? If so, where? And last, it has an on off switch, my ubec also has an on/off switch that I wired, can i use both? thanks guys!

squeeforever 07.14.2006 05:57 PM

18, no "jumper", and I have no clue....It would depend on what the switch on the esc does. If it only turns the BEC on like some, then it would do absolutely nothing I would think.

jhautz 07.14.2006 06:05 PM

You actually need to pull the center wire on the plug that goes to the reciever. Its in the book that came with it. I actually thought that was pretty cheesy myself. But, its the only way to disable the internal BEC. Make sure you do it too. When I first got mine, I just pluged it up quick to bench test it on 4s and without even running it the thing got hot. The internal BEC is definately not meant for high cell counts.

neweuser 07.14.2006 06:37 PM

Understandable Jhautz, what about the switch?

sjcrss 07.14.2006 08:16 PM

after reading the quark instructions , my guess is that the switch on the quark is for the controller... you need to unwire your switch on the ubec and just run from the on/off switch on the quark...you should be fine then...

BrianG 07.14.2006 09:23 PM

The ESC uses a BEC no matter if you use it for your servos/Rx or not. If you don't use it (removing the red wire to the Rx), the internal BEC simply provides power to it's internal controller circuits. Those circuits hardly draw any amps so a linear BEC is OK. It's when the same BEC has to supply power to other devices that heat becomes a problem. For a linear regulator, power dissipation is calculated by (v_batt-6)*load_current. So if you are using 14.4v batteries and your servos draw 4A total, that's almost 34 watts the regulator has to dissipate on the same heatsink the FETs use. The switch simply cuts power either to (or from) the BEC to the internal circuits thereby shutting off the controller.

neweuser 07.14.2006 11:01 PM

That's a lot of info BrianG, very intuitive, but the question still remains. and yes i RTFM, but what is the switch for? Something for programming the controller? then when you turn it off, it saves the prgramming, cool, but do you have to turn it on when you drive? TFM SUCKS! Any who, this is the first time you'll see me get frustrated guys! Only because nothing is in the language of Troy! ARRRRRGGGGG!!!! Also, what are the metal wraps on the wires for? can i remove then?

BrianG 07.14.2006 11:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by neweuser
That's a lot of info BrianG, very intuitive, but the question still remains. and yes i RTFM, but what is the switch for? Something for programming the controller? then when you turn it off, it saves the prgramming, cool, but do you have to turn it on when you drive? TFM SUCKS! Any who, this is the first time you'll see me get frustrated guys! Only because nothing is in the language of Troy! ARRRRRGGGGG!!!! Also, what are the metal wraps on the wires for? can i remove then?

Lol, calm down before you give yourself a coronary! Simple answer: the switch shuts off the internal controller circuitry. It does not shut off the FETs though so a small amount of current will slowly drain the main batteries. And yes, you need the switch on to drive.

The metal wraps? You mean the ferrite cores? Those are to inhibit RF interference I would assume (they block high frequencies).

neweuser 07.16.2006 11:42 AM

The ferrite cores, can they be removed? My esc didn't have something like that and ran fine. the problem that i'm having is that the receiver wires are wrapped around it and it shortens my length....i want to remove the one on the receiver wires so i can reach my receiver...thanks BrianG, the help is most appreciated!

jhautz 07.16.2006 01:00 PM

Id leave the ferite things on there. I'm sure they put them on for a reason.

Just get an extender for the wires.

BrianG 07.16.2006 01:12 PM

Like you I needed the extra length as well. So, I took them off and have had no adverse effects, but I made sure that all my electrics were installed far from each other to help prevent noise induction. If you take them off, just keep that in mind if odd things start happening.

neweuser 07.16.2006 05:28 PM

My esc is only near the motor and a fan, but the wires are all in one line along the side of my gorilla chassis going into a receiver box, if the wires are all close, would that have any adverse effect? thanks BrianG!

squeeforever 07.16.2006 05:32 PM

There shouldn't be...

neweuser 07.16.2006 05:41 PM

thanks guys!

BrianG 07.16.2006 07:15 PM

Generally, you want to keep your signal wires away from any high power AC signal. The motor wires are what I consider high power AC. I would also keep Rx antenna wires away from these wires, especially AM systems (due to the way AM modulates its signal). If any low power wires (Tx/Rx, antenna) must run near high power signals, you can minimize any noise by arranging the wires so they run perpendicular to each other rather than parallel.

The quark motor switching frequency is 38kHz, but the signal frequency from the Rx is between 50 and 60Hz (20ms frequency with
~1ms to ~2ms "on" pulses). That is quite a difference in frequency and I assume the ESC would contain some type of bandpass filter to block spurious noise.

Basically, try it the way you have it odd stuff happening, rearrange them.


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