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Dont think for a minute that I have forgotten about this project. I played around with her a little bit tonight. Making some changes to how the equipment tray sits in the Subdriver and verified nuetral set on the ADF2. I double checked the balance point of the sub and depending on how she does next time out I may move the balance point back further. Next weekend we will put her back in the water.
IT TAKES GREAT INTELLIGENCE TO FAKE SUCH STUPIDITY!
GOOD NEWS! Saturday past I got her back in the water. AH........SUCCESS!!! I ran her from creep all the way up to Emergency Speed. On sensitivity settings 1 and 3 on the ADF2, it would not keep periscope depth. On setting 2 it ran great. This boat is so fast you wouldnt believe it. Ive got a rooster tail coming off the periscope. On this particular pond that has long straightaways I like to walk along the bank, keeping the sub in sight and staying up with it. You cannot walk and keep up with her. You have to Jog. So since thats the case I would be fearful to try to increase the speed further by installing the more powerful motors that I spoke of previously. I am , However thinking of putting them in the Seaview. Stay tuned on that.
IT TAKES GREAT INTELLIGENCE TO FAKE SUCH STUPIDITY!
A few other thoughts on this problem. After careful observation I can tell you that some of the vibrations that are upsetting the ADF2 are caused by the propellers being out of balance. Depending on the speed at which they are turning, has a direct bearing on the severity of the planes jittering. At some speeds, you have no oscillations at all. At others you have an unacceptable amount of plane movement. From what I can observe, being in the water doesnt seem to reduce the problem.
Apparently however, we reach a compromise when the ADF2 is set for sensitivity setting 2.
IT TAKES GREAT INTELLIGENCE TO FAKE SUCH STUPIDITY!
Ofcourse, the dangers of driving a sub this fast are very real. Because of the vibration/pitch control problem, you are walking a tightrope between control and out of control. If it were to go out of control, ie: dive, it could clonk itself into the bottom and knock loose the top half of the submarine with its attached floatation foam. At that point, it may not be able to surface because of the loss of floatation foam. So, I watch her very carefully. Any signs of her "disappearing" and its "All Astern Emergency"! Blow all tanks"!!
Of course its not always driven wide open.
IT TAKES GREAT INTELLIGENCE TO FAKE SUCH STUPIDITY!
After careful observation I can tell you that some of the vibrations that are upsetting the ADF2 are caused by the propellers being out of balance. Depending on the speed at which they are turning, has a direct bearing on the severity of the planes jittering. At some speeds, you have no oscillations at all. At others you have an unacceptable amount of plane movement. From what I can observe, being in the water doesnt seem to reduce the problem.
Yup, that's an unfortunate side effect of striving for minimum delay in the ADF2...
A little background on this - when I was originally designing the ADF I wanted to minimize the delay from sensing pitch change to commanding a response, but this comes at the cost of the device being more sensitive to vibration. (Put another way, you can average out the vibes over several servo frames, but then the pitch controller behaves more sluggishly to angle changes.) The payoff though is that you can use a much higher sensitivity setting and still keep things under control than what you would be able to if you had a slower controller, and prop vibes can be dealt with.
Just out of question, what kind of servos are you using for your diveplanes in this boat? Are they coreless?
I usually scoff at folks who propose putting high-end servos in (slow) subs, but in your case you might benefit from high-speed cordless servos to help keep up with the quick reaction of your boat. By the way, I say cordless because they're better at quickly start/stop/reversing their direction than a standard cored servo. Digital may or may not help, but test-driving a high-speed cordless would make for an interesting experiment.
Thanks Kevin. Just to prove that last trip outs success was not a Fluke, I took her out again today. Excellent results again. I had fun with the ducks at the lake. I would try to sneek up on them, underwater. I can get pretty close before one of them would "Sence" something was coming up on them, then they panic. They must think that its an alligator.
This boat makes quite a wake , even with the periscope under the water. Moving at a good clip it leaves a large wake on the surface. Pretty Cool ifin you ask me.
I found it most helpful to use the slider trim lever on the radio to dial in periscope depth setting. The indents on the joystick are sometimes too course and you have trouble finding the sweet spot.
Another thing that I noticed was the tendency of the sub to broach when you turn to starboard, but the tendency to submerge somewhat deeper as you turn to port.
IT TAKES GREAT INTELLIGENCE TO FAKE SUCH STUPIDITY!
Assuming perfect torque matching between the two propellers, I'm wondering what would account as a source of the pitch up/down depending on which way you turn? Maybe something to do with the two staggard sets of control surfaces? More likely an asymmetrical mixing between transmitter and the two control surface servos?
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