Technical, Techniques, Hints, and Tips > Radio Equipment
Cut servo lead ?
Rob47:
At the Bristol model show I bought a amber rotary beacon for the hangar on HMS Victorious
When it arrived I find that as soon as rx is powered up the beacon works,it takes four stick movements to turn off. As it always comes on in the mode I want would it be possible to cut one of the servo type lead that plugs it directly into
The rx and run it through a relay to give me on/off option. If so which wire to cut, it has the black/ oranet/ brown lead
Bob
derekwarner:
Bob....here is a link page to the colour coding for all popular Tx to Rx & wiring/servos etc.....it suggests that the + is always the RED wire
https://www.google.com.au/search?q=colour+codes+for+different+servo+wires&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjX4MfQ-prdAhUEAogKHe-bDd8QsAR6BAgBEAE
The majority of Brands have the + in the centre shell position, however Airtronics Brand appear to be + to an outer shell position <*<
I have little electronic knowledge, however if I compare it to a steam component, I would choose the source or the + Red wire
Lets wait & see of someone from the School of Black Arts responds
Derek
Martin (Admin):
malcolmfrary:
If the beacon is powered from the receiver, cutting its power supply will certainly stop it switching on. Ever.
A link to it might help with guesswork, but the fact that stick movements do turn it off suggests that it expects something on the signal wire. As a temporary test, winkle out the brown wire and see what happens. This will stop the signal but let the beacon draw power. If it wakes up in the required mode, job done.
Black/orange/brown is unusual, but the usual arrangement is that black is nearest the edge of the TX board and is -ve power, the center pin is +ve, and the other one is signal, whatever the colour scheme.
Rob47:
Mal
Thanks for that, the brown wire removed stopped all movement, and when reinserted allowed beacon to come on in the slow rotary mode, ideal for the aircraft hanger. As I have plenty of channel to play with, on and off will be controlled by the circuit board connected to the I bus board. Agan thanks, btw the colour schemes was the normal brown orange black
Cheers
Bob
--- Quote from: malcolmfrary on September 02, 2018, 09:07:11 am ---If the beacon is powered from the receiver, cutting its power supply will certainly stop it switching on. Ever.
A link to it might help with guesswork, but the fact that stick movements do turn it off suggests that it expects something on the signal wire. As a temporary test, winkle out the brown wire and see what happens. This will stop the signal but let the beacon draw power. If it wakes up in the required mode, job done.
Black/orange/brown is unusual, but the usual arrangement is that black is nearest the edge of the TX board and is -ve power, the center pin is +ve, and the other one is signal, whatever the colour scheme.
--- End quote ---
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