All,
Over the winter I built up a twin SprintCat 40.
It's actually 34.5 inches long.
Running CC1520 - 1600KV motors on 5S -- 33300 no load rpm.
The ice is just melted off the pond in Illinois so I gave her a run.
First run was using 442's right and left, Sharpened and balanced (otherwise stock).
It took 15 feet to get on plane, there was a lot of cavatation.
When on plane, the hull ran flat. There was no bow up attitude, but it ran fast.
Roster tail was 90% flat- about 2 feet high, the other 10% was a light mist that was 5 feet tall.
Ok, I took the boat home and opened up the hatch. 100% dry.
I wanted to get rid of the cavatation so I installed new props: 447's S&B, silghtly detounged.
Charged the batteries and ran back to the lake.
The boat would not get up on plane!
Motors ran, the hull "pushed" water.
No cavatation at all.
The props were fully under water.
If I ran it for 50 feet or more, it would kinda plane.
The full length of the sponsons were in the water and the speed was SLOW.
It didnt seem like the motors were turning 33,000 rpm.
Two batteries in parallel for both ESC's.
5S, 5000MAH each for 10,000Mah total.
ESC's are T180. The low voltage cutout = 2.8 volts.
Is this a Low voltage cutout problem?
If it wasnt, I should have burned out the ESC's trying to turn the props at 33,000rpm?
If I turn off the LVC, how do I keep from damaging the batteries by too much discharge?
Should a CC1520 turn 447 props? Boat weighs 15 pounds RTR.
Mark
Over the winter I built up a twin SprintCat 40.
It's actually 34.5 inches long.
Running CC1520 - 1600KV motors on 5S -- 33300 no load rpm.
The ice is just melted off the pond in Illinois so I gave her a run.
First run was using 442's right and left, Sharpened and balanced (otherwise stock).
It took 15 feet to get on plane, there was a lot of cavatation.
When on plane, the hull ran flat. There was no bow up attitude, but it ran fast.
Roster tail was 90% flat- about 2 feet high, the other 10% was a light mist that was 5 feet tall.
Ok, I took the boat home and opened up the hatch. 100% dry.
I wanted to get rid of the cavatation so I installed new props: 447's S&B, silghtly detounged.
Charged the batteries and ran back to the lake.
The boat would not get up on plane!
Motors ran, the hull "pushed" water.
No cavatation at all.
The props were fully under water.
If I ran it for 50 feet or more, it would kinda plane.
The full length of the sponsons were in the water and the speed was SLOW.
It didnt seem like the motors were turning 33,000 rpm.
Two batteries in parallel for both ESC's.
5S, 5000MAH each for 10,000Mah total.
ESC's are T180. The low voltage cutout = 2.8 volts.
Is this a Low voltage cutout problem?
If it wasnt, I should have burned out the ESC's trying to turn the props at 33,000rpm?
If I turn off the LVC, how do I keep from damaging the batteries by too much discharge?
Should a CC1520 turn 447 props? Boat weighs 15 pounds RTR.
Mark
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