Schultz Repair time
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That is the typical Schulze shrink job - the shrink is a very high temp plastic, thick and tough. It is cut to provide some support to the caps, which are already well-cemented together with some hard white "caulking".
I sent my Schulze 18-149 and 40-160 back to the factory in September and got them back in about a month. Not bad, and plenty of communication in between.
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I usually get mine back within 3 weeks plus they send an email when they receive it.
Takes less time to ship to Germany then Canada.Comment
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I've had good service from Shultze also.MODEL BOAT RACER
IMPBA President
District 13 Director 2011- present
IMPBA National Records Director 2009-2019
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NAMBA 1169Comment
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The nice thing about Schulze is that they don't usually go thermal nuclear when something goes wrong. You really have to do something evil to one to get it to turn into a crispy critter. Broke can be fixed. Most of the time. A charcoal briquette not so much.Noisy personComment
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Just don't leave a 40.160 plugged into cells and have the reciever powered when the trans is off. That's the best way to nuke a 40.160. Very messy.
Terry, you must have the constitution of an elephant when it comes to FE. I have never had an issue with Schultze repairs and have sent them quite a few in my time. Maybe you need to carry and anti-static matt or at least insulate your shoes.
Their detailing of repair work is obnoxious. The paper they print the reciept on is almost as thick as their shrink. I totally appreciate German quality but maybe they could lessen the cost a bit if they used standard sheet paper!!!!Comment
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haha They used to call me voltron at the office. The IT guys wanted me sit on some sort of lightning rod. I refused. Just last week a guy tried to sneak up on me and flick my ear. He got zapped. 2" of blue flame. Wonder how many volts that is.
Honestly, I think you could pound nails with a 40/160 and then race the next heat with it. I still remember Steve dead shorting one across the board and racing it the rest of the weekend.Noisy personComment
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That reminds me. That's exactly how I frishizzled one of the pair of 240's I smoked at the nats. Left it plugged in while we were out retrieving boats. Came back to a puddle of goo.Noisy personComment
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No, that was the second one that weekend. I'm about 91% sure that was a timing issue. Oh, and that giant pitch work of art wheel from Haines. That thing has like 3.5" of pitch on it. On a UL motor. Sure was fast though.
The first one was in the Q sitting on the table. Slow burner. Didn't even know anything had happened until I pulled the tape. Looked like a grease stain where the speedo should have been.Noisy personComment
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I wish I would have taken the ESC out for a run with normal setup. It quit on me with just a little run. I GUESS I HAVE TO SEND IT BACK. It was suppost to be a 60 amp run.Comment
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Are you all saying never to leave a lipo plugged in with the transmitter off? I never heard that before. I know not to leave them plugged in to an esc because the esc is drawing current all the time and will drain the battery below a recovery point but never heard the other. Is this true of all ESC's or some sort of strange rule about Schulze's? I never leave a battery plugged in anyway but still good to know!Mini Cat Racing USA
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