Help me out a little...making my own flex shafts

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  • kfxguy
    Fast Electric Addict!
    • Oct 2013
    • 8746

    #31
    Originally posted by T.S.Davis
    You're too sensitive on this Travis. You asked about my bearings. I shared how I do mine. I don't have 20 years of boating experience either but I do have thousands of laps and a hand full of SAW passes under my belt. Doesn't mean a thing I know but don't assume I haven't tried umpteen different shaft setups.

    I've done it a multitude of ways. From .032 wire to .098 on a gear drive. Ball bearings. Sleeve bearings. Over sized struts for bigger bearings. All kinds of stuff. I even have a strut with needle bearings. That one is really cool. Tuff as nails that one.

    Don't mean to come off as being sensitive. Just had good intentions with my post and it sounded a little like your were getting sensitive with the "what you do vs what I do" comment. I just wanted to stop any argument or ill feelings before they started. We just became "cool" with each other instead of always bumping heads. I think we have more to offer each other not being at each other's throat all the time. That being said, I've learned a lot from you guys, and I try to give it back any time I can. Maybe I shouldn't because some people get offended when some "new" guy or "outsider" comes on their forum and tries to lend advice. (Who the heck am I to do that anyway?! Lol)
    32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

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    • srislash
      Not there yet
      • Mar 2011
      • 7673

      #32
      Originally posted by T.S.Davis

      I've done it a multitude of ways. From .032 wire to .098 on a gear drive. Ball bearings. Sleeve bearings. Over sized struts for bigger bearings. All kinds of stuff. I even have a strut with needle bearings. That one is really cool. Tuff as nails that one.
      Alright we(Chris, Travis? and myself) were discussing needle bearings as I would think they would be tuffer than rollers provided a dead straight prop shaft is used. And here you are with proof? Excellent! So oversize strut? Limited RPM.?

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      • T.S.Davis
        Fast Electric Addict!
        • Oct 2009
        • 6220

        #33
        Using the needle bearings in a big strut with a 1/4" drive. So RPM are lower than you guys run. I've been up to a 462 on that setup. Never thought about a high RPM setup on those. Hmmmmm Have to think on that some.

        Edit.......I don't have a lot of laps on that setup now that I think about it. It might be premature for me to say it's stellar.
        Noisy person

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        • ray schrauwen
          Fast Electric Addict!
          • Apr 2007
          • 9472

          #34
          I used needle bearings in my Cheetah on 4s and so far I like them. Again, like Terry, not high rpm. 1900kv on 4s.

          The reason I used them was because the large Octura strut had the perfect ID for them and the bearing ID was 3/16", perfect for my driveline. It was convenient.
          Nortavlag Bulc

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          • dmitry100
            Fast Electric Addict!
            • Mar 2015
            • 1264

            #35
            Speaking of shafts... Any of you guys know where I might be able to find 6mm shafts drilled for spring steel wire (2mm or 2.5mm) ?

            Also, do any of you guys use Speedmaster or MTC struts for Twin Cats? I was thinking to use the flat bottom ones one of my cats... but it seems like they can prove to be a bit annoying to adjust and to keep water out (was thinking to maybe use a rubber hose of some sort between the strut tube and the transom stuffing tube and do the same in the area between the flex cable, collet stuffing tube to keep the water out...)

            I've been hunting for some good quality flex cable lately-- came across 5mm Gundert (is this 4.75mm?), 4.75mm MTC (Model Center Lorenz), and the hydromarine.de 4.75mm cable.
            Which ones do you guys think is best and strongest cable out of all those?

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            • kfxguy
              Fast Electric Addict!
              • Oct 2013
              • 8746

              #36
              Originally posted by dmitry100
              Speaking of shafts... Any of you guys know where I might be able to find 6mm shafts drilled for spring steel wire (2mm or 2.5mm) ?

              Also, do any of you guys use Speedmaster or MTC struts for Twin Cats? I was thinking to use the flat bottom ones one of my cats... but it seems like they can prove to be a bit annoying to adjust and to keep water out (was thinking to maybe use a rubber hose of some sort between the strut tube and the transom stuffing tube and do the same in the area between the flex cable, collet stuffing tube to keep the water out...)

              I've been hunting for some good quality flex cable lately-- came across 5mm Gundert (is this 4.75mm?), 4.75mm MTC (Model Center Lorenz), and the hydromarine.de 4.75mm cable.
              Which ones do you guys think is best and strongest cable out of all those?

              I would create your own thread for some of those questions. We are kinda getting off topic lol
              32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

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              • 78MaicoRider
                Senior Member
                • Jun 2013
                • 179

                #37
                In the needle bearing setups, Is the stub shaft the inner race? If so are you using hardened (Rc60 min) stub shafts? The needles will eat up steel that is not hardened. If the stub is stainless, it is difficult to get stainless hard enough to run needles directly on and last.
                41" & 29" FE Aeromarine Sprint Cats, Quickdraw powered "Dollar Eater" 41" Insane Cat, 29" BL mod Graupner Cat, 24" Hydro, 29" OB Cat, BL mod NQD Tear Into Jet boat, 55" Scarab, JET SWEEP R/C pool skimmer Rescue Boat.

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                • kfxguy
                  Fast Electric Addict!
                  • Oct 2013
                  • 8746

                  #38
                  Originally posted by 78MaicoRider
                  In the needle bearing setups, Is the stub shaft the inner race? If so are you using hardened (Rc60 min) stub shafts? The needles will eat up steel that is not hardened. If the stub is stainless, it is difficult to get stainless hard enough to run needles directly on and last.


                  I didn't want to say anything about that and it was on my mind the whole time when needle bearings were brought up.....glad someone else did :) but I agree.
                  32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

                  Comment

                  • srislash
                    Not there yet
                    • Mar 2011
                    • 7673

                    #39
                    Ok so can stainless be hardened to work with needles.

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                    • ray schrauwen
                      Fast Electric Addict!
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 9472

                      #40
                      Originally posted by 78MaicoRider
                      In the needle bearing setups, Is the stub shaft the inner race? If so are you using hardened (Rc60 min) stub shafts? The needles will eat up steel that is not hardened. If the stub is stainless, it is difficult to get stainless hard enough to run needles directly on and last.
                      I'm guessing that some stubs are stainless and some are not. The less you pay,....?

                      Hughey stubs were hardened steel I think?????
                      Nortavlag Bulc

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                      • martin
                        Fast Electric Addict!
                        • Aug 2010
                        • 2887

                        #41
                        Aeromarine stub shafts are hardened & ground to .0001" tolerance that can be used in needles, they sell just the stubs or complete welded flex assemblies.

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                        • ray schrauwen
                          Fast Electric Addict!
                          • Apr 2007
                          • 9472

                          #42
                          Good info Martin, thx!
                          Nortavlag Bulc

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                          • 78MaicoRider
                            Senior Member
                            • Jun 2013
                            • 179

                            #43
                            Originally posted by srislash
                            Ok so can stainless be hardened to work with needles.
                            There are many different types of steel and stainless steel. 300 series stainless cannot. 400 series can be hardened. The material used for stainless steel bearings is what you would want to use.
                            41" & 29" FE Aeromarine Sprint Cats, Quickdraw powered "Dollar Eater" 41" Insane Cat, 29" BL mod Graupner Cat, 24" Hydro, 29" OB Cat, BL mod NQD Tear Into Jet boat, 55" Scarab, JET SWEEP R/C pool skimmer Rescue Boat.

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                            • Jeff Wohlt
                              Fast Electric Addict!
                              • Jan 2008
                              • 2716

                              #44
                              You must use hardened steel shafts for needle bearings. Why use those when a caged bearing is better abec 5 and 7 bearings can withstand 60,000+ rpms? I have sold many. You want to lube them?....just remove both inner shields of each bearing and drill a small hole in the strut to use a needle oiler to fill it up. Octura never designed anything to withstand high rpms. Many will disagree that a bearing strut does not help...but eventually with torque on the brass sleeve of these struts it will go and get sloppy. I still do not like a brass sleeve bearing spinning in the stuffing tube...just me. Anything will last a while with enough grease on it. The inner spinning sleeve was designed for nitro guys years ago....most of their boats was a motor and a mess from grease everywhere...they generally never ran teflon either. I had my share of nitro messes. Then I found plettenberg...still have 5-6 of them...man they could suck the amps out of round cells...burned many and then came Aveox brushless!!
                              www.rcraceboat.com

                              [email protected]

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                              • kfxguy
                                Fast Electric Addict!
                                • Oct 2013
                                • 8746

                                #45
                                Originally posted by Jeff Wohlt
                                You must use hardened steel shafts for needle bearings. Why use those when a caged bearing is better abec 5 and 7 bearings can withstand 60,000+ rpms? I have sold many. You want to lube them?....just remove both inner shields of each bearing and drill a small hole in the strut to use a needle oiler to fill it up. Octura never designed anything to withstand high rpms. Many will disagree that a bearing strut does not help...but eventually with torque on the brass sleeve of these struts it will go and get sloppy. I still do not like a brass sleeve bearing spinning in the stuffing tube...just me. Anything will last a while with enough grease on it. The inner spinning sleeve was designed for nitro guys years ago....most of their boats was a motor and a mess from grease everywhere...they generally never ran teflon either. I had my share of nitro messes. Then I found plettenberg...still have 5-6 of them...man they could suck the amps out of round cells...burned many and then came Aveox brushless!!
                                Agree 100%.
                                32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

                                Comment

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