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Re: Power source
Posted: March 27th, 2016, 12:06 pm
by watermydoing14
Bazinga+ wrote:I am currently using a 7.4 Volt battery to power 5 servos. The recommended voltage for the servos is 6 volts but the closest thing I could find to 6 was 7.2 and 7.4 volt batteries(like 8.5 when fully charged). I've had a lot of servos burn out and I'm wondering if this is because I'm running it at a higher voltage, or just that I was putting too much strain on them or they were stalling for too long. If the problem is the high voltage does anyone know where I could get the right voltage rechargeable batteries with decent storage. I would like to stay away from voltage regulators.
You could use 2 packs of 4 AA or AAA batteries connected in parallel. 4 of those batteries connected in series will be about 6 V and 2 packs of those in parallel should give you enough power to power 5 servos at once without changing the voltage
Re: Power source
Posted: March 27th, 2016, 5:13 pm
by windu34
watermydoing14 wrote:Bazinga+ wrote:I am currently using a 7.4 Volt battery to power 5 servos. The recommended voltage for the servos is 6 volts but the closest thing I could find to 6 was 7.2 and 7.4 volt batteries(like 8.5 when fully charged). I've had a lot of servos burn out and I'm wondering if this is because I'm running it at a higher voltage, or just that I was putting too much strain on them or they were stalling for too long. If the problem is the high voltage does anyone know where I could get the right voltage rechargeable batteries with decent storage. I would like to stay away from voltage regulators.
You could use 2 packs of 4 AA or AAA batteries connected in parallel. 4 of those batteries connected in series will be about 6 V and 2 packs of those in parallel should give you enough power to power 5 servos at once without changing the voltage
I would advise against using normal alkaline batteries. Battery packs are a much better alternative because they can be recharged and you will never have to buy another pack (at least for the season). 6V battery packs are sold in high current capacities.
Re: Power source
Posted: March 27th, 2016, 6:37 pm
by Bazinga+
windu34 wrote:watermydoing14 wrote:Bazinga+ wrote:I am currently using a 7.4 Volt battery to power 5 servos. The recommended voltage for the servos is 6 volts but the closest thing I could find to 6 was 7.2 and 7.4 volt batteries(like 8.5 when fully charged). I've had a lot of servos burn out and I'm wondering if this is because I'm running it at a higher voltage, or just that I was putting too much strain on them or they were stalling for too long. If the problem is the high voltage does anyone know where I could get the right voltage rechargeable batteries with decent storage. I would like to stay away from voltage regulators.
You could use 2 packs of 4 AA or AAA batteries connected in parallel. 4 of those batteries connected in series will be about 6 V and 2 packs of those in parallel should give you enough power to power 5 servos at once without changing the voltage
I would advise against using normal alkaline batteries. Battery packs are a much better alternative because they can be recharged and you will never have to buy another pack (at least for the season). 6V battery packs are sold in high current capacities.
I agree. Also, a battery pack of 4 C or D batteries would also work better than AA's since they are very high capacity, but rechargeable batteries are preferable.
Re: Power source
Posted: March 27th, 2016, 6:40 pm
by windu34
Bazinga+ wrote:windu34 wrote:watermydoing14 wrote:
You could use 2 packs of 4 AA or AAA batteries connected in parallel. 4 of those batteries connected in series will be about 6 V and 2 packs of those in parallel should give you enough power to power 5 servos at once without changing the voltage
I would advise against using normal alkaline batteries. Battery packs are a much better alternative because they can be recharged and you will never have to buy another pack (at least for the season). 6V battery packs are sold in high current capacities.
I agree. Also, a battery pack of 4 C or D batteries would also work better than AA's since they are very high capacity, but rechargeable batteries are preferable.
Not to mention it would be extremely expensive to keep purchasing batteries
Re: Power source
Posted: March 28th, 2016, 1:00 pm
by watermydoing14
windu34 wrote:Bazinga+ wrote:windu34 wrote:
I would advise against using normal alkaline batteries. Battery packs are a much better alternative because they can be recharged and you will never have to buy another pack (at least for the season). 6V battery packs are sold in high current capacities.
I agree. Also, a battery pack of 4 C or D batteries would also work better than AA's since they are very high capacity, but rechargeable batteries are preferable.
Not to mention it would be extremely expensive to keep purchasing batteries
We are using rechargeable batteries, so the only inconvenience is having to recharge them relatively often