Futaba MC 9100A ESC
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Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Having only been flying Jeti/Hacker Comp 90 ESC's since 05-06 (I think) I've always looked for something that was a direct replacement since they stopped making them. The Spin 99 is the closest to it, but even it isn't as easy to program as the old Comps. Since I'm now down to 2 Comps, it was time I started figuring something out. Over the holiday's I was able to do some flying with the new Futaba MC 9100A ESC. I must say, it's the closest to the Comp as far as performance and ease of programming (with the recommended programmer). The only real difference is the throttle transition seems smoother with the Futaba than the Comp.
My plane set-up is as follows:
Plane – 2M Osiris (prototype)
Motor – Fury 60/67-230
Prop – APC 21x13W
Batt – ThunderPower 5000 45C (my 20C are 3 years old and a bit weak at the end of flights)
ESC Settings:
Batt type - Lipo
Lipo cut - 3V
Cut type – Slow
Motor Direction - Normal
Timing – 24 degrees
Acceleration – Normal
Start Power - Normal
Brake % - 90%
Brake – On
Poles – 28
Gear Ratio – 1.0 : 1
Temps the days I flew were low to mid 70’s and the ESC was 123F when I took the canopy off to check it. This is with the ESC mounted on top of my batteries with not much air flowing to it. I will need to find a better mounting method than just that lol. I'll probably drop it in the chin for direct airflow to it.
My plane set-up is as follows:
Plane – 2M Osiris (prototype)
Motor – Fury 60/67-230
Prop – APC 21x13W
Batt – ThunderPower 5000 45C (my 20C are 3 years old and a bit weak at the end of flights)
ESC Settings:
Batt type - Lipo
Lipo cut - 3V
Cut type – Slow
Motor Direction - Normal
Timing – 24 degrees
Acceleration – Normal
Start Power - Normal
Brake % - 90%
Brake – On
Poles – 28
Gear Ratio – 1.0 : 1
Temps the days I flew were low to mid 70’s and the ESC was 123F when I took the canopy off to check it. This is with the ESC mounted on top of my batteries with not much air flowing to it. I will need to find a better mounting method than just that lol. I'll probably drop it in the chin for direct airflow to it.
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Does it have fixed endpoints, auto, or both?
Thanks,
Verne (I have 3 Comp controllers )
Thanks,
Verne (I have 3 Comp controllers )
ORIGINAL: JAS
Having only been flying Jeti/Hacker Comp 90 ESC's since 05-06 (I think) I've always looked for something that was a direct replacement since they stopped making them. The Spin 99 is the closest to it, but even it isn't as easy to program as the old Comps. Since I'm now down to 2 Comps, it was time I started figuring something out. Over the holiday's I was able to do some flying with the new Futaba MC 9100A ESC. I must say, it's the closest to the Comp as far as performance and ease of programming (with the recommended programmer). The only real difference is the throttle transition seems smoother with the Futaba than the Comp.
My plane set-up is as follows:
Plane – 2M Osiris (prototype)
Motor – Fury 60/67-230
Prop – APC 21x13W
Batt – ThunderPower 5000 45C (my 20C are 3 years old and a bit weak at the end of flights)
ESC Settings:
Batt type - Lipo
Lipo cut - 3V
Cut type – Slow
Motor Direction - Normal
Timing – 24 degrees
Acceleration – Normal
Start Power - Normal
Brake % - 90%
Brake – On
Poles – 28
Gear Ratio – 1.0 : 1
Temps the days I flew were low to mid 70’s and the ESC was 123F when I took the canopy off to check it. This is with the ESC mounted on top of my batteries with not much air flowing to it. I will need to find a better mounting method than just that lol. I'll probably drop it in the chin for direct airflow to it.
Having only been flying Jeti/Hacker Comp 90 ESC's since 05-06 (I think) I've always looked for something that was a direct replacement since they stopped making them. The Spin 99 is the closest to it, but even it isn't as easy to program as the old Comps. Since I'm now down to 2 Comps, it was time I started figuring something out. Over the holiday's I was able to do some flying with the new Futaba MC 9100A ESC. I must say, it's the closest to the Comp as far as performance and ease of programming (with the recommended programmer). The only real difference is the throttle transition seems smoother with the Futaba than the Comp.
My plane set-up is as follows:
Plane – 2M Osiris (prototype)
Motor – Fury 60/67-230
Prop – APC 21x13W
Batt – ThunderPower 5000 45C (my 20C are 3 years old and a bit weak at the end of flights)
ESC Settings:
Batt type - Lipo
Lipo cut - 3V
Cut type – Slow
Motor Direction - Normal
Timing – 24 degrees
Acceleration – Normal
Start Power - Normal
Brake % - 90%
Brake – On
Poles – 28
Gear Ratio – 1.0 : 1
Temps the days I flew were low to mid 70’s and the ESC was 123F when I took the canopy off to check it. This is with the ESC mounted on top of my batteries with not much air flowing to it. I will need to find a better mounting method than just that lol. I'll probably drop it in the chin for direct airflow to it.
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Does it come with any neat "fasstest" features? Like integrated voltage and current measurements transmitted via telemetry? If not, a 124g controller would be a step backwards in evolution IMHO.
#9
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Wondering if the Futaba, Robbe and the OS ESCs are the same products with different labels? OS is owned by Futaba and Futaba produce products for Robbe.
http://www.os-engines.co.jp/Newprodu...1221/1100.html
http://www.rc.futaba.co.jp/motor/index.html
http://www.os-engines.co.jp/Newprodu...1221/1100.html
http://www.rc.futaba.co.jp/motor/index.html
#10
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
I would like to see Futaba introduce their motors and ESC's to the us market. All my Futaba radio gear has been bullet proof and I dont have any doubt this stuff wouldnt be top notch. Looks like they have just the right motor for my 8s Wind 110 too
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
It's probably coming, but in Europe they've launched both the motors and the ESC line under the O.S brand. O.S and Futaba are probably owned by the same company. I love O.S and would use that ESC in a heartbeat, but it seems a bit heavy? My Kontronik jive 80 weighs significantly less.
BTW, What Osiris prototype? Pics of the whole plane, please [8D]
BTW, What Osiris prototype? Pics of the whole plane, please [8D]
#12
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Jon: what is the weight of your Jive 80 including heat sink, wire with noise filter and full length of cables to the motor and batteries? I assume you well be pretty close to the OS/Futaba ESC at 124 grams. The clamed weight of the Jive 80 on Kontroniks web page is probably added by the marketing department.
Wondering if the OS/Futaba ESC works with Plettenberg Adcance 30-10?
Henning
Wondering if the OS/Futaba ESC works with Plettenberg Adcance 30-10?
Henning
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
I'm guessing it's auto end-points as there is no selection for fixed end-points.
I don't know if there are 'hidden' telemetry features in the ESC as I don't have an 18MZ to check with.
I don't know if there are 'hidden' telemetry features in the ESC as I don't have an 18MZ to check with.
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
After checking out the link to Futaba above I set out on a mission to get my hands on one of the 5065-300KV motors for my Wind 110e. A little luck and pulling some strings got it done. I was expecting the absolute highest quality and was not surprised once I got it in my hands. even the motor mount is fully machined. I will start on a 17x10 on 8s and go from there. Thanks for planting the seed Henning
#15
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
The instruction manual for OS and Futaba is the same. I only have the manual for Futaba in Japanese but had someone scan the manual in English for OS for me.
Henning
Henning
#16
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Bill
Did you have to change much to mount the Futaba in your Wind 110 ? Can't wait to get ahold of one
Did you have to change much to mount the Futaba in your Wind 110 ? Can't wait to get ahold of one
ORIGINAL: Bill Clark
After checking out the link to Futaba above I set out on a mission to get my hands on one of the 5065-300KV motors for my Wind 110e. A little luck and pulling some strings got it done. I was expecting the absolute highest quality and was not surprised once I got it in my hands. even the motor mount is fully machined. I will start on a 17x10 on 8s and go from there. Thanks for planting the seed Henning
After checking out the link to Futaba above I set out on a mission to get my hands on one of the 5065-300KV motors for my Wind 110e. A little luck and pulling some strings got it done. I was expecting the absolute highest quality and was not surprised once I got it in my hands. even the motor mount is fully machined. I will start on a 17x10 on 8s and go from there. Thanks for planting the seed Henning
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
The firewall was a bolt up but the rear mount needed rework because the motor is shorter than a Hacker. I had to find someone that was going to Japan to get mine because no one has it in the US. Futaba told me they wouldnt ship to the US and none of Japans hobbyshops that carry it will sell outside Japan. Its a great motor and if you can get one you will be happy with it. I wish they would just go ahead and put their OS badge on it and start selling them in the states. 18x10 xoar at 7400rpm gives 14.5lbs static and 63 amps on 8s 20cand runs cool
#18
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
[/quote]
Thanks again. It is not clear if you can turn the brake on and off in the air by changing the low end pulse width. My current Spin 99 setup gives me idle at low stick position (no brake) and ''brake'' when I switch to a shorter pulse width. In the no brake condition, I do have to jog the stick to get it started initially but once it is started it transitions off of idle very smoothly and the motor never stops. If I have the brake on, lower pulse width at low stick, it is not a smooth transition from off to idle. My YGE does transition from brake to idle very well and it is what I was hoping the Futaba might do too.
I assume with the Futaba programming technique you would get ''brake'' at low stick position and would need to switch to a higher pulse width to get an idle at low stick. Is that doable? How do you set it up?
Jim O
[/quote]
Yes Jim it's doable.
My set up for Plettenberg Advance 30-10 and 14MZ
ESC:
Battery Type: LiPo
Cutoff voltage: Auto
Battery cutoff type: Soft
Advanced Timing: 24º
Accelerations: Normal
Start Power: Lowest
Air Brake: On, 60%
Motor Pole No: 20
Gear Ratio: 1.0:1
Radio:
End points:
High 80%
Low 100%
The break is executed when the stick is at low position. I do not use idle. Startup is super smooth and transition from break to power is seamless.
I fly with APC 21x12WE in a Wind S Pro. The plane does not induce much drag so I only use 80 % power and have more than enough power for F3A in strong wind.
Regards,
Henning
Thanks again. It is not clear if you can turn the brake on and off in the air by changing the low end pulse width. My current Spin 99 setup gives me idle at low stick position (no brake) and ''brake'' when I switch to a shorter pulse width. In the no brake condition, I do have to jog the stick to get it started initially but once it is started it transitions off of idle very smoothly and the motor never stops. If I have the brake on, lower pulse width at low stick, it is not a smooth transition from off to idle. My YGE does transition from brake to idle very well and it is what I was hoping the Futaba might do too.
I assume with the Futaba programming technique you would get ''brake'' at low stick position and would need to switch to a higher pulse width to get an idle at low stick. Is that doable? How do you set it up?
Jim O
[/quote]
Yes Jim it's doable.
My set up for Plettenberg Advance 30-10 and 14MZ
ESC:
Battery Type: LiPo
Cutoff voltage: Auto
Battery cutoff type: Soft
Advanced Timing: 24º
Accelerations: Normal
Start Power: Lowest
Air Brake: On, 60%
Motor Pole No: 20
Gear Ratio: 1.0:1
Radio:
End points:
High 80%
Low 100%
The break is executed when the stick is at low position. I do not use idle. Startup is super smooth and transition from break to power is seamless.
I fly with APC 21x12WE in a Wind S Pro. The plane does not induce much drag so I only use 80 % power and have more than enough power for F3A in strong wind.
Regards,
Henning
#19
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
ORIGINAL: Bill Clark
The firewall was a bolt up but the rear mount needed rework because the motor is shorter than a Hacker. I had to find someone that was going to Japan to get mine because no one has it in the US. Futaba told me they wouldnt ship to the US and none of Japans hobbyshops that carry it will sell outside Japan. Its a great motor and if you can get one you will be happy with it. I wish they would just go ahead and put their OS badge on it and start selling them in the states. 18x10 xoar at 7400rpm gives 14.5lbs static and 63 amps on 8s 20c and runs cool
The firewall was a bolt up but the rear mount needed rework because the motor is shorter than a Hacker. I had to find someone that was going to Japan to get mine because no one has it in the US. Futaba told me they wouldnt ship to the US and none of Japans hobbyshops that carry it will sell outside Japan. Its a great motor and if you can get one you will be happy with it. I wish they would just go ahead and put their OS badge on it and start selling them in the states. 18x10 xoar at 7400rpm gives 14.5lbs static and 63 amps on 8s 20c and runs cool
The only way to get them into the US is to put pressure on Hobbico/Great Planes to do so. They need to know that there is a market or they are likely not to import them. They can be selective about what products they import. I definitely plan to ask for the ESC and also several motor sizes. They already have a few of the OS labeled motors, but none of them larger enough for our use.
http://www3.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin...SM&C=GHG&V=OSM
The only Futaba speed controllers they have are ones intended for the car market.
#20
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Hobbico does carry the os brand speed control which is the same as the Futaba controller.
Here is the link:
http://www3.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin...&I=LXBYTY&P=ML
Here is the link:
http://www3.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin...&I=LXBYTY&P=ML
#21
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
ORIGINAL: Silent-AV8R
The only way to get them into the US is to put pressure on Hobbico/Great Planes to do so
The only way to get them into the US is to put pressure on Hobbico/Great Planes to do so
Henning, can you adjust the PWM on the controller or is it set at 32khz. I looked over the instructions you posted but didnt catch it
#22
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RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
Hi
I too have been looking at them for a project. As regards telemetry, it would be nice if the Futaba ESC logged and transmitted total amps drawn. That way you could set the telemetry to allert you when you are getting close to a selected limit. It would be alot better than monitoring pack voltage which could then be used as an alternative means of health check.
eg the telemetry squawks once you have pulled XmAh or the voltage drops below Y volts.
I too have been looking at them for a project. As regards telemetry, it would be nice if the Futaba ESC logged and transmitted total amps drawn. That way you could set the telemetry to allert you when you are getting close to a selected limit. It would be alot better than monitoring pack voltage which could then be used as an alternative means of health check.
eg the telemetry squawks once you have pulled XmAh or the voltage drops below Y volts.
#23
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
ORIGINAL: Bill Clark
Probabley have to get a pettition going to make that happen. My feeling (and judging from their email response) is that they simply dont care to sell some of their products outside of Japan. They are a big company (aside from RC) and they can pic and choose if they want to.
Henning, can you adjust the PWM on the controller or is it set at 32khz. I looked over the instructions you posted but didnt catch it
ORIGINAL: Silent-AV8R
The only way to get them into the US is to put pressure on Hobbico/Great Planes to do so
The only way to get them into the US is to put pressure on Hobbico/Great Planes to do so
Henning, can you adjust the PWM on the controller or is it set at 32khz. I looked over the instructions you posted but didnt catch it
#24
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
I just checked the specs for the OS controller at Tower Hobbies and the specs listed say it a lower peak amp than the OS instructions list.
Tower Hobbies
SPECS: Cell Handling Capability: 14-36 NiCd/NiMH, 4-12 LiPo
Function: Forward-Stop-Brake-Reverse
Peak Load Current: 70A (85A 5 seconds)
PWM Frequency: 32kHz
Protective Function: Start protection/Low Voltage/ No Signal cut-off/
Overheat protection
Parameter Setting: ESC/ESC Programmer OCP-1 (optional extra)
Dimensions: 2.9 x 2.2 x 1.2" (73.4 x 56 x 31mm)
Weight: 4.4oz (124g)
Probably specs for a different controller.
It also says it has 'reverse' capability, not sure why we would need that for airplanes, but it would be spectacular on final approach.. ;-) Probably a carry over from another controllers specs.
Don
Tower Hobbies
SPECS: Cell Handling Capability: 14-36 NiCd/NiMH, 4-12 LiPo
Function: Forward-Stop-Brake-Reverse
Peak Load Current: 70A (85A 5 seconds)
PWM Frequency: 32kHz
Protective Function: Start protection/Low Voltage/ No Signal cut-off/
Overheat protection
Parameter Setting: ESC/ESC Programmer OCP-1 (optional extra)
Dimensions: 2.9 x 2.2 x 1.2" (73.4 x 56 x 31mm)
Weight: 4.4oz (124g)
Probably specs for a different controller.
It also says it has 'reverse' capability, not sure why we would need that for airplanes, but it would be spectacular on final approach.. ;-) Probably a carry over from another controllers specs.
Don
#25
RE: Futaba MC 9100A ESC
That looks like a typo. Basically they posted the specs for the 70 AMP ESC (OCA-170HV) on the 100 amp page.
These are the specs off the OS website for the OCA-1100 HV ESC:
These are the specs off the OS website for the OCA-1100 HV ESC:
4-36 NC / NiMH for 90 to 110 class motor ,4-12 Lipo
â—‹ Lipo battery type selection, NiCd, NiMH
â—‹ 100A load current of air brake ON / OFF (5 seconds 150A)
73.4x56x31 Dimensions (mm): Weight 124g (including wiring)
OMA-5020-490/OMA-5025-375: OS recommended motor
â—‹ Lipo battery type selection, NiCd, NiMH
â—‹ 100A load current of air brake ON / OFF (5 seconds 150A)
73.4x56x31 Dimensions (mm): Weight 124g (including wiring)
OMA-5020-490/OMA-5025-375: OS recommended motor