i mean with the escs:P
need to order myself some sprockets, chain and gears before anything is moving.
kwik kwestion: where is the low voltage thingy on the 4qds, cant seem to find it
i mean with the escs:P
need to order myself some sprockets, chain and gears before anything is moving.
kwik kwestion: where is the low voltage thingy on the 4qds, cant seem to find it
What voltage you running your test on? I think I remember reading that they only work on 24 or 36v. Also you need to power the control board, 6v I think.
they've come from scotland, have you checked there are no deep fried mars bars stuck in there? :P
i was running 24v and using a 6v rx battery, i think the problem is that it might be set to the 36v mode, looked though the manual and it said how to do it, but i cant find the bit to do it on.
that made little sense
I see. maybe it needs to come apart to do that, a lot of the controls are in the sandwiched part so to speak.
The only came out of the box in Scotland for about an hour before they went back in, they weren't ever gonna fit in Eric, so we kept our deep frier elsewhere. If we had fried them they would have probably broken, and everyone knows the thing a true Scotsman likes more than deep fried things its being a tight fisted B£$%^&![]()
makes sense. also, there is like a fuse holder on the escs, does there need to be a fuse in there for them to work?
if you ever send anything to me tony please include 1-2 deep fried mars bars (they are hard to find in england)![]()
told you we should have got that deep fat fryer i found in tescos!
You dont need a fuse, thats for if the fuse tracks blow. you dont switch them between 24/36v, they just work on either. I would suggest getting hold of a different interface, as that one (Ian Swann one) is no longer made, and you cant get the info on them. You can get a simple plug and play one from 4qd.
masive thanks mate, cheers![]()
Bookmarks