Anyone know if a Turnigy 35A ESC is enough?

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  • JackBlack26
    Senior Member
    • May 2007
    • 905

    #1

    Anyone know if a Turnigy 35A ESC is enough?

    I bought one of these boats, Widowmaker, on eBay pretty much new, but the ESC had burned and been removed for $90. The stock ESC says it's 30 amp and I don't want to spend to much on it so I was wondering if any one had any idea if this would be ok for this boat on 2S.


    Thanks
    Rafael
  • tunnelvision
    Senior Member
    • May 2010
    • 685

    #2
    So you were the one who outbid me on that boat..lol
    Should work fine. I run the pro boat 2900kv and the seaking 35amp esc in my Aquacraft Rio and it works great. 36mm prop on 2 and 3s. That proboat esc will burn, does not have burst abilities like the seaking. Go get it!!
    Go Fast...Turn Right...

    Comment

    • JackBlack26
      Senior Member
      • May 2007
      • 905

      #3
      Hahaha! Are you referring to the one from hobbmart?

      Thanks for the input. I figured it would be enough and thought problem was with the stock ESC. Just thought I would ask before I bought it and found out the hard way that it couldn't keep
      up.

      Comment

      • tunnelvision
        Senior Member
        • May 2010
        • 685

        #4
        Yeah, the one from hobbemart! I have been trying to get one for over a month but do not want to spend more than 75 bucks for the hull. I am sure I will get one eventually..lol I want to put my the seaking in it with my grim 36x55. Then I will convert my Rio to the rescue rig.
        Go Fast...Turn Right...

        Comment

        • JackBlack26
          Senior Member
          • May 2007
          • 905

          #5
          What size sea king are you planning on putting in one?

          Honestly I bid on it thinking I would get outbid, like I always do when biding on Hobymart stuff. I didn't even check the auction till Tuesday and it ended on Sunday :P. Then I read the reviews on this forum and others and was completely bummed out about winning it. Saw videos of it and it skips along the water like crazy! But I figured for now WTH, I'll just keep it and mess with it a bit and try to tame it to where its drivable.

          To start, I might even throw my spare Mamba Max in it without water cooling and see how hot the ESC gets. Considering it has 3 caps and its 100A continues rated it might do ok on 2S in this boat. By what I hear the motor in the Widowmaker is pretty efficient anyways. Worst case it will just thermal and shut down. If it works but is a tad to warm, I'll rig up a way to water cool it and save $50 on a lesser ESC.

          Comment

          • tunnelvision
            Senior Member
            • May 2010
            • 685

            #6
            I have the 35amp that I plan on using in it. Got it for $34 from value hobby, great buy for the money. Also have a 60amp seaking but that's probably going in my supervee R soon so I can upgrade the motor.

            I hear you can tame them down quite a bit with some strut adjustment. It does look like a fun boat for wave jumping if you ask me!! Good luck with it and let me know how you like it.
            Go Fast...Turn Right...

            Comment

            • JackBlack26
              Senior Member
              • May 2007
              • 905

              #7
              Hmm, wave jumping does sound fun!

              Thanks, and I sure will let you know.

              Comment

              • yellowbird
                Member
                • Sep 2010
                • 44

                #8
                Seaking ESC

                Hi Jackblack26

                I have a Shockwave 26 I converted to brushless using the Widowmaker motor this summer. As I needed to buy a brushless ESC I bought the Seaking 35A ESC, thinking it would be better than the ProBoat stock 30A ESC which a lot of people have had problems with burning up.

                The 35A ESC ran fine with 6-cell NiCd and 8 cell NiMh packs and 2S lipo, using the Proboat plastic prop and an Octura replacement Y534 I got after the original prop broke. However when I got an Eagle Tree logger I found that the motor was actually drawing much more than 35A - up to 50A or so. The ESC has a "burst" rating much higher than 35A which was actually OK for my pond - I can't run for more than 10s at full speed anyway - but I decided to upgrade to the Seaking 60A ESC instead for peace of mind when I upgraded to a Y535 metal prop. However I do hear that the 35A ESC is conservatively rated and puts up with some abuse, so a good buy for <$30.

                -yellowbird

                Comment

                • JackBlack26
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2007
                  • 905

                  #9
                  Thanks for the input, Yellowbird. For now I have decided to stay with the Mamba Max speed control in there. I ran 3 5000mah 2S packs back, to back, to back today with no water cooling to the ESC and I could hold my hand to the heatsink with out it burning my thumb, so it had to be under 100*. I forgot my temp gun. The boat is so small and light that I don't believe I will need a cooled ESC unless I upgrade to a bigger prop. The boat is already a handful as it is, so I think it will stay as it is and just get a metal version of the stock prop. I did break the stock prop and I threw in the one from my Apache. Don't know if it was a different one but I did notice a bit of change in speed. It seemed faster for some reason and it was kicking up more water. I'll post a video of it running in my other thread.

                  Comment

                  • yellowbird
                    Member
                    • Sep 2010
                    • 44

                    #10
                    Mamba cooling

                    Hi JackBlack26

                    Just a thought, you could try adding a water cooling plate to your Mamba ESC for a bit more protection? OSE has these for ~$6

                    http://www.offshoreelectrics.com/pro...prod=ose-80678
                    http://www.offshoreelectrics.com/pro...prod=ose-80674

                    which you may be able to shrinkwrap or tie wrap on top of the existing heatsink for extra cooling.

                    - yellowbird

                    Comment

                    • JackBlack26
                      Senior Member
                      • May 2007
                      • 905

                      #11
                      Haha, I was going to be ghetto and just JB weld some tubing along the sides of each end, length wise, on the green heat sink

                      But seriously, I was going to take the ESC apart and see if I can get the stock heat sink off. If I can I'll put one of those over the FETs, attach it with heat transfer epoxy from Radio Shack, and shrink wrap it. Thanks

                      Comment

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