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jnev 04.16.2007 09:21 PM

wood
 
I searched and couldn't find anything related, so I thought I would ask. I have access to a wood shop every other week day. I was wondering if anyone has tried to make a motor mount out of wood, or if it would or has a chance of working. I was wondering the same about a battery tray. I think that a battery tray may work, but would a wooden motor mount have too much flex to hold the motor?

Thanks

mwe-maxxowner 04.16.2007 09:29 PM

Wood would not work. It may for a time, but it will wear and loosen/quit working as well. I've worked in a cabinet shop and around wood for years, and I'm certain it would not work. Have contemplated making a few parts from wood out of curiosity before though.

BrianG 04.16.2007 09:31 PM

When it gets wet/damp, it expands. At any rate, wood simply does not have the density and hardness of metal or even some plastics.

If it's very easy to work with, maybe make some mock-ups of an idea instead of using relatively expensive metal. But to actually use it; I wouldn't.

seth556 04.16.2007 09:42 PM

A very long time ago I saw a guy that converted his nitro to electric with a wooden motor mount.

Mike.L 04.16.2007 09:48 PM

A motor mount, no. But a battery tray shure why not. Stain it and put high gloss!

jnev 04.16.2007 11:21 PM

Thanks for the replys guys. I will probably make one and then install on the rc just to see how it looks, and then if I like it... I will send it to Mike or some other machinest to make it out of quality metal.

How about a battery tray. Mike L. said that it should work... anyone else have any opinions?

BrianG 04.16.2007 11:57 PM

Depends I guess. For the tray to be fairly strong when made of wood, I would think the walls would have to be about 1/8" thick (like plywood) to handle the inertia of the batteries when the vehicle hits something, lands from jumps, etc. If you make the walls too thin, the cells will break right through. I dunno - maybe. For the work involved, I would rather use something like fiberglass so you can make some pretty crazy shapes.

skellyo 04.17.2007 09:26 AM

Why not use HDPE for the battery tray? It's a high density plastic that can be cut using standard woodworking tools.

http://www.usplastic.com/catalog/cat...name=72&Page=1

captain harlock 04.17.2007 09:37 AM

I once thought that I could make a rc vehicle out of wood, but then again, wood can't stand all of the elements like metal and plastic.

Procharged5.0 04.17.2007 10:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BrianG
When it gets wet/damp, it expands. At any rate, wood simply does not have the density and hardness of metal or even some plastics.

If it's very easy to work with, maybe make some mock-ups of an idea instead of using relatively expensive metal. But to actually use it; I wouldn't.

+1

I've used wood for mock-ups and for templates but you need a metal or thermoplastic material for "the real thing".

HotnCold 04.17.2007 04:21 PM

Good call Skellyo - thats what mike and i use when prototyping parts - A thick HDPE milled out to hold batteries works wonders... Good call

jnev 04.17.2007 06:45 PM

Thanks for the link skellyo. I've never seen that material before. I think I'll try it just for mock ups of what the real thing will look like.

Thanks a lot guys.

Procharged5.0 04.17.2007 06:48 PM

That's a good source. Thanks!

skellyo 04.17.2007 08:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HotnCold
Good call Skellyo - thats what mike and i use when prototyping parts - A thick HDPE milled out to hold batteries works wonders... Good call

Thanks...I've got some of it sitting here ready to make my own battery trays with it soon. I just went with 1/2" though, planning to sink the batts into it about 1/4".

skellyo 04.17.2007 08:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ***RC***
Thanks for the link skellyo. I've never seen that material before.

Sure you have...it's what most cutting boards are made out of. Heck, a lot of it on usplastics.com is even FDA approved. :D


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