Its up to you, but I believe the consensus these days is 'Buy once, buy right'. You are better off buying a decent pair of controllers which you can reuse and transfer into future machines than tying to buy cheap. Combat is way outside what most ESC's are designed for and you will probably find you have spent as much on replacement cheap parts as you could have on one really good one.
We use Brushless in our HW's I'll admit so its not my area of expertise, but a pair of Vypers, shock mounted would be a good say to go. Alternatively, drop your voltage to 24V and go with TZ85's... though do expect them to get very hot.
After our Rangebridge 2 blew I am looking for an alternative-£180 is a
lot for me and to have another blow at that price would be traumatic.
Many speed controllers are very pricey and apart from lack of engineering
skills, the cost is a major issue to new roboteers
I'm considering buying a scooter esc too, to do some experimenting on
ie possible ways of reversing-.
If cost is a hindrance, start smaller. A heavy will cost you a 2de hand car in the run of a few years. It ain't a cheap hobby.
On the other hand, it's a very satisfying hobby that will boost your skills faster than most educational courses and will give you a leg up in a technical profession.
I have experience building large and small robots at home but absolutely none with the combat robot and the kinetic shocks these machines are subjected to!
You can't try before you buy and very pricy for trial and error
Also my main stress is finding products to deal with current draw in a pushing match without burning out!
Thanks for the recommendations guys!
Any experience with cytron controllers anyone?
https://www.robotshop.com/uk/cytron-...iABEgLnZPD_BwE
Last edited by T00TY_FRU1TY; 14th January 2018 at 10:46.
60A is a tad low for our application. But with the right shock mounting, those could be usable.
I think Katch uses them in his heavy. Not heard any problems so far but it does look quite fragile so I'd second shock mounting it.
Why are you overvolting the motors?
I'm tempted to over volt to 48 think cytron is 45v so yeah that ballpark. Robot claw on the same site also look good.
Out of curiosity what methods are used for controlling the large spinners with huge motors as they have no need to be reversed? I'm not using this but just curious
You'll burn out the motors. I'll ask again, why are you wanting to overvolt?
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