Futaba R6014 Question
#26
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Farmington,
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RE: Futaba R6014 Question
Dan,
You are correct for a single battery connection. But if dual connections are used, which is what I thought his problem was about and one them is which, i.e. the positive and negtive are swapped in the connecter you certainly will have a short... I did it myself on a home made pack were I failed to double check my orinination on the plugs... I was able to quickly negate the short by pulling the first power lead I could reach. The RX is still working strong to this day and I had to rewire the homemade A123 pack. Not one of my brighter moments.. LOL
Ed
I'm not sure if that is the problem just something I encountered..
You are correct for a single battery connection. But if dual connections are used, which is what I thought his problem was about and one them is which, i.e. the positive and negtive are swapped in the connecter you certainly will have a short... I did it myself on a home made pack were I failed to double check my orinination on the plugs... I was able to quickly negate the short by pulling the first power lead I could reach. The RX is still working strong to this day and I had to rewire the homemade A123 pack. Not one of my brighter moments.. LOL
Ed
I'm not sure if that is the problem just something I encountered..
ORIGINAL: DAN AVILLA
Just to clear that up. If you plug it in reverse nothing will happen. I just did that also. He is right about the positive needing to be in the center. Make sure you were not useing a airtronics extension. Dan
Just to clear that up. If you plug it in reverse nothing will happen. I just did that also. He is right about the positive needing to be in the center. Make sure you were not useing a airtronics extension. Dan
#27
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RE: Futaba R6014 Question
My guess is that this scenario (the batteries cross connected) is what happened, but in any case, the current that caused the I^2R heating of the wires went through the power and ground bus of the receiver. Without knowing the gauge of the battery wires it is hard to guesstimate how much current went through. Those LiFe have very low internal resistance and can source a very large current though a low resistance circuit.
You could take the case off the receiver and see if the busses were damaged or any of the connector insulators were melted.
You could take the case off the receiver and see if the busses were damaged or any of the connector insulators were melted.
#28
Thread Starter
RE: Futaba R6014 Question
Hi,
So I figured it out. This is one of those times when you look in the mirror and say "Moron"....
So I couldn't figure out why the short would happen sometimes, but not other times I plugged the battery into the switch. As it turns out, I lost the little jumper that comes with the Matchbox. I, being the gifted low-voltage electrician that I am, made up my own. I jumped over to the wrong port, and that caused the short. It would happen some times and not others because some times, the Matchbox was plugged into the receiver! So idiotic. Fried the receiver, a couple of switches and a couple of nice batteries....
So I figured it out. This is one of those times when you look in the mirror and say "Moron"....
So I couldn't figure out why the short would happen sometimes, but not other times I plugged the battery into the switch. As it turns out, I lost the little jumper that comes with the Matchbox. I, being the gifted low-voltage electrician that I am, made up my own. I jumped over to the wrong port, and that caused the short. It would happen some times and not others because some times, the Matchbox was plugged into the receiver! So idiotic. Fried the receiver, a couple of switches and a couple of nice batteries....