middle_watch wrote:Apologies if this is one of those noddy questions but can you extend the control wires to a servo from the receiver?
Yes. And here's the noddy extras:
You can buy made-up servo extension leads. But they cost money, and that's an anathema. If you want to do it yourself -
Make sure the polarity's correct at both ends when extending a cable. D'uh!
Use replacement cable of
at least the same gauge/type as the current ones.
Don't go mad with extending a cable - an extension of 50cm is never going to drop the volts enough to matter. 5m might. 50m (!) will.
Try to run your servo wires as far away from the power lines as possible.
You can shield the power cables if you experience problems. Box and/or conduit them in with metal to make a
Faraday Cage. My mobile phone is dead in a lift - you could find that isolating the power side of things inside metal works for you.
In TV audio situations, there's a type of mic cable called
star quad which was designed for a low susceptibility to interference. It carries two pairs of conductors, and it's twisted along its length with an earth wire wrapped around the outside. So you might find that twisting a long servo cable run along its length, while looking a little ugly, helps reduce servo chatter - if it's present at all.
I think you're doing the right thing with regards to reducing the length of mechanical linkages. I'd sooner trust the 'lectrics than whippy control rods.
Good luck!
Andy
[quote="middle_watch"]Apologies if this is one of those noddy questions but can you extend the control wires to a servo from the receiver?[/quote]
Yes. And here's the noddy extras:
You can buy made-up servo extension leads. But they cost money, and that's an anathema. If you want to do it yourself -
Make sure the polarity's correct at both ends when extending a cable. D'uh!
Use replacement cable of [i]at least [/i]the same gauge/type as the current ones.
Don't go mad with extending a cable - an extension of 50cm is never going to drop the volts enough to matter. 5m might. 50m (!) will.
Try to run your servo wires as far away from the power lines as possible.
You can shield the power cables if you experience problems. Box and/or conduit them in with metal to make a [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_cage]Faraday Cage[/url]. My mobile phone is dead in a lift - you could find that isolating the power side of things inside metal works for you.
In TV audio situations, there's a type of mic cable called [b]star quad [/b]which was designed for a low susceptibility to interference. It carries two pairs of conductors, and it's twisted along its length with an earth wire wrapped around the outside. So you might find that twisting a long servo cable run along its length, while looking a little ugly, helps reduce servo chatter - if it's present at all.
I think you're doing the right thing with regards to reducing the length of mechanical linkages. I'd sooner trust the 'lectrics than whippy control rods.
Good luck!
Andy