Hi Gang,
I am talking theoretically here, There is always a huge emphasis on speed for a tail servo, far faster than a human can actually react and this is due to the fact that we run a gyro which can react as fast as electricity flows.
with the mk1 human eyeball it is hard to detect movement that needs correction until it is well off course.
now enter the FBL controller. surely we should be sticking the fastest possible servos on the cyclic to keep up with the gyros in the controller? I have been casually looking at flybarless, the only helis I have that are real candidates are my trex 500 and clone 450's. I think I may bite the bullet on the 500 size but I was wondering why I don't see the servo speed being of that great an importance on the FBL?
Going back to the tail servo speed debate it seems to be some people train of thought that if you can put something on there that react in the time it takes my wife to lose her rag then it isn't even worth bothering with a gyro...
is it just snobbery or do we all need to upgrade the servos across the whole bird when we go FBL?
of course a decent cyclic servo still moves 60 degrees in less than 0.17 of a second which is faster than a human (IIRC human reflexes are about 0.4 of a second).
so is it simply the fact that you sacrifice torque for speed and you mist have a certain torque level to move the swash with a running rotor?
I noticed MKS are selling FBL servos now is this going to be a new trend?
sorry if this question has been answered before but I couldn't find it.
/Steve
I am talking theoretically here, There is always a huge emphasis on speed for a tail servo, far faster than a human can actually react and this is due to the fact that we run a gyro which can react as fast as electricity flows.
with the mk1 human eyeball it is hard to detect movement that needs correction until it is well off course.
now enter the FBL controller. surely we should be sticking the fastest possible servos on the cyclic to keep up with the gyros in the controller? I have been casually looking at flybarless, the only helis I have that are real candidates are my trex 500 and clone 450's. I think I may bite the bullet on the 500 size but I was wondering why I don't see the servo speed being of that great an importance on the FBL?
Going back to the tail servo speed debate it seems to be some people train of thought that if you can put something on there that react in the time it takes my wife to lose her rag then it isn't even worth bothering with a gyro...
is it just snobbery or do we all need to upgrade the servos across the whole bird when we go FBL?
of course a decent cyclic servo still moves 60 degrees in less than 0.17 of a second which is faster than a human (IIRC human reflexes are about 0.4 of a second).
so is it simply the fact that you sacrifice torque for speed and you mist have a certain torque level to move the swash with a running rotor?
I noticed MKS are selling FBL servos now is this going to be a new trend?
sorry if this question has been answered before but I couldn't find it.
/Steve


). 


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