LAV25
Quarry Creeper
Trying to put together an Orlandoo Jeep. Slow going because it's so small but that's not today's issue. I got the Orlandoo-Hunter D4L radio and sound unit pack along with the kit, finally found some batteries for it but they immediately killed it.
First, I plugged the steering servo into the steering servo port, then a freshly charged battery (NIMH) into the battery port. There's a little tab to make sure that the battery can only be plugged in one way. No light, the receiver didn't look like it was waking up. Check the directions and realized I needed to plug in the power switch as well, so I did that and flipped it both ways. The receiver still didn't wake up.
It was at this point that I realized the NIMH battery was getting hot, so I quickly unplugged it. I'd had a similar issue when charging it, so I thought that it might be a problem with the battery.
Switched to a LiPo I got yesterday and had just peak-charged. The receiver still didn't wake up no matter which way I flipped the power switch, but when I was looking at the manual (which sucks) I smelled smoke. Factory-installed grey smoke coming out of the receiver, I yanked the battery out, unplugged the servo, but when I tried to pull the power switch out it came out without the plug, the heat had melted the solder on the leads.
Does it sound like I did anything wrong? I've been in this hobby on and off for thirty years and never burned anything out by plugging it in. Bought it from Banggood, no idea what their customer service/returns policy is like but between the frustration of the build and the electronics frying I'm about to toss this thing in the local river and call it a loss.
First, I plugged the steering servo into the steering servo port, then a freshly charged battery (NIMH) into the battery port. There's a little tab to make sure that the battery can only be plugged in one way. No light, the receiver didn't look like it was waking up. Check the directions and realized I needed to plug in the power switch as well, so I did that and flipped it both ways. The receiver still didn't wake up.
It was at this point that I realized the NIMH battery was getting hot, so I quickly unplugged it. I'd had a similar issue when charging it, so I thought that it might be a problem with the battery.
Switched to a LiPo I got yesterday and had just peak-charged. The receiver still didn't wake up no matter which way I flipped the power switch, but when I was looking at the manual (which sucks) I smelled smoke. Factory-installed grey smoke coming out of the receiver, I yanked the battery out, unplugged the servo, but when I tried to pull the power switch out it came out without the plug, the heat had melted the solder on the leads.
Does it sound like I did anything wrong? I've been in this hobby on and off for thirty years and never burned anything out by plugging it in. Bought it from Banggood, no idea what their customer service/returns policy is like but between the frustration of the build and the electronics frying I'm about to toss this thing in the local river and call it a loss.