Yesterday was a good day.
I found the possibly last bag of coffee nut M&Ms at the store on the way home from work and a delivery was waiting for me upon my return. Before I get into any tiny truck stuff, I'm throwing down the gauntlet and declaring coffee nut as the absolute, undisputed, king of M&M flavors.
Here is the definitive ranking of M&Ms:
#1: Coffee nut - All hail the king
#2: Peanut butter - So much more peanut butter than Reese's Pieces
#3: Dark chocolate peanut - Everything great about the regular peanut M&Ms with better chocolate
#4: Peanut - Classic, crunchy, delicious. I horde them in my desk at work
#5: Pretzel - Salty, sweet, and tasty but can barely crack the top 5 due to strong competition
#6: Crispy - M&Ms with stuff inside of them are inherently better than those with nothing inside
#7: Dark - Empty M&M but at least they used the good chocolate
#8: Plain - Go ahead, eat 1,000 of them, they still won't be as good as those higher up on this list
#9: Mint - An acceptable substitute for breath mints or brushing your teeth
.
.
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#DFL: Pumpkin spice or any other seasonal flavor - Everything that is pumpkin spice flavored (except for the pumpkin spice donut from Krispy Kreme) is garbage. If people don't like it enough to eat it year round, it is a terrible flavor.
That is the list, I'll fight anyone who doesn't agree.
Anyway, what was I talking about? Doesn't matter.
I did a little soldering.
What could a JST plug tapped off the battery power be for? Could it be for a Traxxas light kit? Could it?
It could.
But its not.
The answer is a Holmes SHV500 servo.
You may remember this:
The Power HD servo again showed several times it couldn't always point the tires in the desired direction, it's days in this truck are likely coming to a close.
Yes, the Power HD experiment has officially ended and yes, I did quote myself.
The Holmes servo was perfect for several reasons:
#1: It tacks on 150+ more oz of torque than the Power HD's alleged 320 oz. Power HD is totally lying about that servo's rating, I have a 12 year old Hitec that puts out 333 oz and it is way stronger than this Power HD.
#2: Stronger servos these days usually require more voltage and with 4 other servos rated for 6V, feeding the steering servo through it's own BEC would be a hassle and defeat half the purpose of running a Mamba X. No BEC needed for the SHV500. Remember kids, you always need a BEC, except when you don't.
#3: With the SHV500V2 just being released, Holmes has the original versions on sale for $50 off. The V2's big improvements are to durability in fast, big tire, hard use, U4-type applications, life is much easier in my TRX4 so the V1 is more than strong enough.
So fast, so strong, so quiet. The Power HD groaned non-stop as it searched for center, smashing it with a hammer for a moment of peace had crossed my mind more than once. I may have occasional rage issues but anyone who has driven for hours with a servo that won't shut up knows the struggle.
While I popped in the new servo, I had a moment of inspiration. We draw inspiration from many places in our lives, mine came from the garage floor. It was staring at me from the floor; a tiny eye hook. Perfect for winch line routing control.
There should be no problems with the winch line now.
And that makes 3 updates in a row with no driving. To be fair, most of these have come during the week. Who has time to spend hours driving during the week? Really, I would like to know so we can trade places. You can do my work, I can go drive: it would be fun for all!
If anyone needs me, I'll be waiting for that message about trading lives.