You know when you have one of those days where you really shouldn't have picked up the tools? Yeah.
The leads are soldered under the driver board. The motor and potentiometer are soldered to the driver board, and the main gear is pressed on to the potentiometer. I can't find a way to (safely?) pop the main gear off the potentiometer so that I can release the driver board. So I can't turn over the driver board to desolder the leads.
So now I have to re-glue the leads back into the case and build another servo mount, just to get back to where I was this morning. And I've made the chassis mounting holes worse by having to drill out the stripped screw.
I would have stripped that screw at some point anyway - I'd planned to do something different with the grommet from the rear of the servo, maybe try to un-kink the lead somehow. Good to find out now while the build's not done, before I'm under pressure on race day some time in the future.
I can make the extension lead work for now, and the chassis isn't really that much worse than it was before (and the mounting holes being in a poor state was the whole reason why I designed the new servo mount, which will still hold fine).
Good to show the downs as well as the ups with this kind of restoration, right?
Get back on the line, soldier! Time to carefully trim down the strain reliever so I can get a tighter radius on the servo leads. And do it near the plug end in case I slice through the insulation
Much better.
Silicone adhesive squirted in to keep everything nice and secure.
I really only need a few centimeters, and having the extension leads look like an external distribution board might clean up the wiring enough for my OCD to calm the heck down. A little printed bracket to hold them, maybe some cable clips.
Get back on the line, soldier! Time to carefully trim down the strain reliever so I can get a tighter radius on the servo leads. And do it near the plug end in case I slice through the insulation View attachment 260657 View attachment 260658
When I was a young boy, my grand father has a small office. On its wall was a little plaque. It said, 'If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullsh!t.'
I only really need two (servo, transponder) if I sneak the ESC in on its own, it has the length. Then I can slim the whole thing down to just 3 walls and it'll tuck in nicely. Top load or side load, though?