Caliber 30 idle up settings
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA
Posts: 315
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Caliber 30 idle up settings
Hi,
I have been flying my caliber 30 for a few months and am struggling to find the correct pitch curve and throttle curve settings for idle up 1, everything on the heli is stock.
I am using a Hitec Eclipse 7.
Can someone please help me with the idle up 1 settings, especially pitch.
My current radio setup is:
Pitch curve normal= 19% 25% 64% 75% 100%
Throttle curve normal = 20% 50% 60% 70% 100%
Idle up 1 pitch= 0% 25% 65% 80% 100%
Idle up 1 throttle= 100% 74% 62% 74% 100%
I do realise that my pitch is probably way off an I currently do not have a pitch gauge but if anyone can maybe give me their pitch setup it would really be appreciated.
Thanks,
Ross
I have been flying my caliber 30 for a few months and am struggling to find the correct pitch curve and throttle curve settings for idle up 1, everything on the heli is stock.
I am using a Hitec Eclipse 7.
Can someone please help me with the idle up 1 settings, especially pitch.
My current radio setup is:
Pitch curve normal= 19% 25% 64% 75% 100%
Throttle curve normal = 20% 50% 60% 70% 100%
Idle up 1 pitch= 0% 25% 65% 80% 100%
Idle up 1 throttle= 100% 74% 62% 74% 100%
I do realise that my pitch is probably way off an I currently do not have a pitch gauge but if anyone can maybe give me their pitch setup it would really be appreciated.
Thanks,
Ross
#2
My Feedback: (11)
RE: Caliber 30 idle up settings
The problem is the numbers you just gave are just that, numbers.
If you want useful help you will have to give useful information and that will entail getting a pitch gauge. We have no way of knowing what the actual pitch is.
What you want in idle up is -9, -5, 0, 5, 9 degrees of pitch.
If you want useful help you will have to give useful information and that will entail getting a pitch gauge. We have no way of knowing what the actual pitch is.
What you want in idle up is -9, -5, 0, 5, 9 degrees of pitch.