Carbon pushrods

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9 years 4 months ago #3365 by flyingpete
Carbon pushrods was created by flyingpete
Hi Guy's
Im thinking of moving the servos from the tail on my hurricane nearer to the c of g.This means that the elevator pusrods would be 1000mm long and the only way i can think of doing this would be to use a carbon inner and outer.In the days of 35meg radio i was told this would create RF noise and clash with the radio,so do any of you electronic guru's have any thoughts on this with 2.4 radio? B)

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9 years 4 months ago #3366 by Dante
Replied by Dante on topic Carbon pushrods
Such a long carbon rod inside the fuselage can certainly cause signal interference be it 35MHz or 2.4GHz and it would be safer to use a wooden pushrod with metal sliced ends for the clevis and Z bend. In the days of 27MHz wooden pushrods were the preferred option, we never heard of carbon in those far off days that's when even long metal pushrods worried us. :cheer:

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9 years 4 months ago #3367 by Dante
Replied by Dante on topic Carbon pushrods
Alternatively snakes are possibly the easier option, flexible with no interference and easy fix ends. :whistle:

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9 years 4 months ago #3368 by
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There are special receivers for use in composite fuselages. I believe a carbon rod, with suitable guides, would be better than an inner and an outer. Again, I have seen a lot of models with carbon rods and std Rx's, but not known of any problems. Now, when shall I start repairing that xxxxxxx!

Stuart

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9 years 4 months ago #3370 by flyingpete
Replied by flyingpete on topic Carbon pushrods
Thanks for the input guy's ;)

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9 years 4 months ago #3371 by MikeSeale
Replied by MikeSeale on topic Carbon pushrods

Dante wrote: Such a long carbon rod inside the fuselage can certainly cause signal interference be it 35MHz or 2.4GHz and ...


I think you're wrong, Dante. 2.4g receivers cannot pass the interference to the servos. This is why we don't get glitches like we used to.

If you do go with carbon, I would not have it running inside another carbon tube...too much friction. Either run it inside a plastic tube or just support it at several locations as it passes down the fuselage. A wooden pushrod (also supported at various points) has an advantage that it will expand/contract at a similar rate to the fuselage and this will minimise trim changes from one day to the next..

As for snakes, I've read many times that they can have a lot of slop over a long run. However, Sullivan make them in 48" lengths so there must be a lot of people world-side that are happy to use them. I'd be happy to use one of the semi-rigid (blue) sullivan snakes, making sure the outer was glued in as many places as possible along the fuselage

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