Jump to content

Greatest model safety aid ever


gangster
 Share

Recommended Posts

Many years ago ( mid 80s) I purchased (and still have) a couple of on board battery checkers. Made/distributed by Flair these were simple two LED devices unlike the fancy multi led devices that every one else was buying. They did however have a major advantage over most every other on board volt meter

As well as the green light extinguishing and the red lighting at about 4.2volts it had a latching feature causing the red led to remain flashing even if the supply restored. Much is written on this forum and others about situations of possible brownout but this cheap simple device delivers the info/warning straight away it is also a totally independent arbiter and identifies voltage drop caused by faulty Rx,wiring,battery's, faulty or overworked servos etc etc

Over the years these have probably saved me a number of crashes. It definitely identified black lead corrosion on at least 1 switch harness and also warned me that my Rx was intermittently decking the supply. Only once was I misled by this baby !but the right way round) I did a low pass in the late evening with the sun low and glimpsed the red flash ,swift landing circuit only to find the flash was due to the low evening sun reflecting on the red anodised part of a Sanwa switch plate

So why were these never popular. Why is a similar device not offered from several sources? Why have I never seen one used by anyone else? Far simpler and easier than anything telemetry can offer and of course there was no telemetry until very recently.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Advert


gangster

I use variations of this on all my models. To me this is much better than the one you describe (I've not seen your one though) since it gives a continuous INDICATION of battery status under load. Thus you can see at a glance if there is a fault or watch the gradual discharge over the flying session.

The gadget you describe relies on pre-set decision circuitry to indicate when something goes wrong - could be nice solid green then go red a second after take off because it was just on the high side of voltage.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmm, I think I would struggle to read of the battery status whilst the plane is flying.

I like it that once the batt has gone below a set level it will stay on red, so if it happens in flight you can see it after landing.

Loads of modern stuff available with lights and audible, plus the new voice transmitters can speak the on board voltage

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Posted by Masher on 04/02/2015 07:58:33:

gangster

I use variations of this on all my models. To me this is much better than the one you describe (I've not seen your one though) since it gives a continuous INDICATION of battery status under load. Thus you can see at a glance if there is a fault or watch the gradual discharge over the flying session.

The gadget you describe relies on pre-set decision circuitry to indicate when something goes wrong - could be nice solid green then go red a second after take off because it was just on the high side of voltage.

Despite using FrSky, I don't have telemetry on all my receivers. I use the device suggested by Masher. I do find it rather sensitive though. It frequently flashed red when hitting multiple servos but I have never had a brown out (especially on low capacity NiMh). It is a good indicator for battery condition though. What it is excellent for is identifying stiff or binding surfaces. They are much faster reacting than telemetry - which tend to use a larger averaging window. I now tend to fit them as standard on all my models but try not to read too much/worry too much from all the flashes.

Martyn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree with everything you say Martyn but as an indicator it still works because the brain computes relative state of the battery I think.

I am also about to make the jump to Taranis after a couple of false starts. All my Rx's will have telemetry as that's one of the main selling points for me. I will still use the voltage indicator as well because it is another level of checking.

By the way gangster, these LED's are very bright - it's surprising how visible they are if placed on the side of the fuselage covered by an acetate window!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Posted by IanN on 04/02/2015 09:27:45:
Posted by john melia 1 on 04/02/2015 08:40:08:

trouble is none of these voltage indicators work with LiFe packs

Try these

**LINK**

I didn't get them from this source, but I use them with LiFe packs (on the 6.6v setting, obviously) and they're great thumbs up

i've tried them , trouble is when you waggle both sticks the led's flash on and off up and down the scale , so cant see the use of that tbh

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...