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De-Glitching
Solutions
Below are a list of suggestions they
may help you diagnose solutions to your glitching problems. If you have a solution to
offer, please e-mail me and I'll add it too the list.
Try keeping your motor, receiver and speed
control at least 4 inches from each other.
Keep your wiring from criss crossing all over
the place and away from the motor where possible.
Make sure your antenna wire exits the hull as
soon as possible (I put my receiver in the back right corner). Don't cut it or wrap the
excess up in the hull. Make it long! This may not look cool but is very effective.
Make sure you have the appropriate capacitors
and/or possibly a shotky diode on the motor (check the manufacturers recommendations on
the speed control and motor for the correct ones).
Check your brushes for extensive wear and the
commutator on the armature that it isn't all black. If either of these conditions exist
have the motor repaired. You can do it yourself if able or send it in.
If youre using a receiver with BEC, try
a 6 volt receiver battery pack or instead.
Try shielding the receiver. Use lagging tape
(aluminum sticky backed tape) or foil to cover the whole receiver. Make sure the shield
touches nothing else, and covers all exterior casing.
Make sure all electrical connections are good
and use good quality connectors.
The simple process is always elimination. Beg,
borrow and steal other parts to try with the boat. When the problem goes away, or reduces,
you may have found the component, or a contributing factor.
The financial method: Get Hitec's new Dual
Conversion FM receiver.
Finally, keep your radio gear dry. If you
don't have a radio box, wrap your receiver in a little paper towel and double bag it. If
you do have a radio box, do it anyway, it's cheap insurance. Check it often for leaks and
remove it at the end of the day. The bottom line is that receivers that get wet don't
always make a 100% come back.
There are a few other tricks but these are the
biggies in my estimation.

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