I'm a little confused. . .
This all relates to my Logo 500/550sx.
I'm currently in the process of replacing my Savox 1259/1257 servos for some lovely Futaba 251/451s (Thanks Maj!) for the lower current draw characteristics of the Futabas. This has been brought on because I have gone with a Turnigy K-Force 100LV which I installed whilst my Kontronik 100LV was off for repair (the replacement Jive is still sat in an unopened box holding its value for the moment)
The Turnigy's inbuilt BEC struggles just slightly with the high current draw of the Savox and browns out the Vbar here and there on the bench during cyclic/pitch pumps/stick wiggling (something that happened with the original ESC in the combo deal that got me into Logos in the first place - the Hacker X70).
So basically, out of curiosity, before changing out the servos, I thought I would try the Opti Guard out (even if only to experience the fabled high-power LEDs!).
The setup is K-Force 100LV, Savox servos on a Logo 500, OptiGuard sharing a Y-lead with the inbuilt BEC into Vbar.
With the OptiGuard, no matter how much stick-wiggling I do on the bench (Motor backed up from the main gear, blades off and TH on!) I can no longer make the mini Vbar brown out. So it seems that the OptiGuard is doing the same job as the buffer pack previously did, although the LED does not light, so the suggestion would be that it hasn't 'kicked in' with power.
My question comes more from curiosity than anything, though ultimately for safety I guess (I like to know hows and whys with this sort of equipment as far as my little brain is able to cope with the information!) - Is the OptiGuard supplying power the whole time even when not in rescue mode (no bright white LED) or is it something else?
My guess would be (seeing as the LED doesn't come on to suggest Opti 'on') that perhaps there is a capacitor onboard the Opti somewhere which is 'stepping in' at those potential brownout moments with just enough juice to compensate for the teeny current 'blip'??
Can anyone throw some light on this?
Matt
This all relates to my Logo 500/550sx.
I'm currently in the process of replacing my Savox 1259/1257 servos for some lovely Futaba 251/451s (Thanks Maj!) for the lower current draw characteristics of the Futabas. This has been brought on because I have gone with a Turnigy K-Force 100LV which I installed whilst my Kontronik 100LV was off for repair (the replacement Jive is still sat in an unopened box holding its value for the moment)
The Turnigy's inbuilt BEC struggles just slightly with the high current draw of the Savox and browns out the Vbar here and there on the bench during cyclic/pitch pumps/stick wiggling (something that happened with the original ESC in the combo deal that got me into Logos in the first place - the Hacker X70).
So basically, out of curiosity, before changing out the servos, I thought I would try the Opti Guard out (even if only to experience the fabled high-power LEDs!).
The setup is K-Force 100LV, Savox servos on a Logo 500, OptiGuard sharing a Y-lead with the inbuilt BEC into Vbar.
With the OptiGuard, no matter how much stick-wiggling I do on the bench (Motor backed up from the main gear, blades off and TH on!) I can no longer make the mini Vbar brown out. So it seems that the OptiGuard is doing the same job as the buffer pack previously did, although the LED does not light, so the suggestion would be that it hasn't 'kicked in' with power.
My question comes more from curiosity than anything, though ultimately for safety I guess (I like to know hows and whys with this sort of equipment as far as my little brain is able to cope with the information!) - Is the OptiGuard supplying power the whole time even when not in rescue mode (no bright white LED) or is it something else?
My guess would be (seeing as the LED doesn't come on to suggest Opti 'on') that perhaps there is a capacitor onboard the Opti somewhere which is 'stepping in' at those potential brownout moments with just enough juice to compensate for the teeny current 'blip'??
Can anyone throw some light on this?
Matt


and a platinum star

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