[NSRCA-discussion] Servo question

Jon Lowe jonlowe at aol.com
Sat Jul 5 10:55:28 AKDT 2008


 3421's have the pot shaft driven directly by the output shaft.? If you reach down thru the hole for the servo arm screw with a jewelers screwdriver, there is a slot that can be used to adjust centering of the pot which is a press fit into the gear.? The pot shaft may have slipped in the output gear.? Pot shaft could be binding, or the output gear may be cracked internally allowing the shaft to slip. You could just need a new output gear.? I'd try adjusting it to see how easy it slips.? A VERY small movement of the pot shaft will affect centering in a BIG way, so be careful.? Perhaps, the pot may also be coming apart or wearing badly internally, affecting centering.? Definitely determine the cause or send it back to have at least the pot replaced, along with the gears.

Years ago, many servo pots were driven like this, and didn't caouse a problem except for servo pot wear.? Replacing pots after 25 flights was not all that uncommon.? Most (all) larger servo pots anymore are indirect drive to help prevent pot wear.? 3421 is probably just too small to do an indirect drive.


 


Jon Lowe

 


 

-----Original Message-----
From: chris moon <cjm767driver at hotmail.com>
To: nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
Sent: Sat, 5 Jul 2008 12:47 pm
Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] Servo question













Ok, here is a brain teaser for you experts.

On Sunday 2 weeks ago I went out flying maybe 4-5 flights. All was 
fine.  When I got to the flying site on Friday for the Lake City 
contest, I made a practice flight and the plane was climbing like mad.  
I got it down and found that 1 of the elevator halves was about 3/8" up 
from the other.  Before the flight, I checked the operation of the 
elevators and they were moving correctly but I don't remember 
specifically if I paid any attention to if they were centered 
perfectly.  Now, nothing was changed between the the last time I flew 
and this flight.  The transmitter was on the right model.  The linkage 
had not slipped, nor had the control horn bent.  The control surface 
showed no sign of trauma from a severe bump possibly causing a stripped 
gear.  The servo (JR 3421sa) was functioning 100% normally it was just 
the center had changed on it's own.  I removed the servo arm (alum - not 
stripped either) and moved it one spline and adjusted the sub trim 
slightly and flew a few test flights and the contest with no problems.  
Now at home, I removed the servo to send it back and inspected it and 
found nothing abnormal.  The gears all look fine. Here is what I have 
eliminated:

servo arm - not stripped
servo gears - not stripped
pushrod and linkage - no play and not slipped on the clevis threads
transmitter - correct model selected and could not be elevator pot in 
transmitter since it did not affect the other elevator servo's centering

I am sending it back for a check up but just was wondering if anyone has 
had any similar experience ever or if they have any possible causes.

Thanks

Chris







Making the world a better place one message at a time. Check out the i'm Talkathon.=


 





_______________________________________________
NSRCA-discussion mailing list
NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion



 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.nsrca.org/pipermail/nsrca-discussion/attachments/20080705/cac051a9/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the NSRCA-discussion mailing list