Electrical question

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  • secrtwpn1
    SubCommittee Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 269

    #1

    Electrical question

    Would it be acceptable to have a Tamiya connecter on one end of a wire and at the other end a Deans connector?

    Thanks for everyones patience!!!!

    Farlan
  • crueby
    Member
    • May 2015
    • 343

    #2
    As long as the plugs you are connecting to are those and you are not overloading the current ratings, makes no difference. A number of times I've also made short adapters so I could use same battery in a car and a boat.

    Comment

    • chips
      Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 494

      #3
      Radio Control Boat Modeler Magazine (no longer published) had an article in the Summer 2006 issue. The article was titled "Reduce resistance, Increase performance". The author, Frank Breau, compared the standard Tamiya plug, bullet motor plug, Anderson/Sermos Power Pole plug, Dean's Ultra Plug, and 8 inches of 14 gage wire. He attached 14 gage wire to male and female plugs. After the matching plugs were mated, the wires were trimmed so the overall length was 8 inches. He then recorded the resistance with a digital multimeter.

      The results were:
      8 inches of 14 gage wire - 0.4 Ohm
      Dean's Ultra Plug - 0.4 Ohm
      Anderson/Sermos - 0.6 Ohm
      Bullet motor plug - 0.8 Ohm
      Tamiya plug - 1.3 Ohms

      It would be interesting to see how some other plugs measure up: EC3 or EC5; Traxxas plug; XT60.

      Comment

      • salmon
        Treasurer
        • Jul 2011
        • 2342

        #4
        Very Interesting!
        If you can cut, drill, saw, hit things and swear a lot, you're well on the way to building a working model sub.

        Comment

        • JWLaRue
          Managing Editor, SubCommittee Report
          • Aug 1994
          • 4281

          #5
          I’m not sure that I need to care about fractions of an Ohm for our purposes......? Would be interested to understand why.

          -Jeff
          Rohr 1.....Los!

          Comment

          • vasily
            Junior Member
            • Jun 2014
            • 42

            #6
            Tamiya plugs are widely reviled in fast electric boat and RC car forums. They are rated at 10 amps continuous (and even that is suspect) and overheat and fail if over-stressed. Deans (Ultra) plugs are rated higher. Normal Deans plugs are low current RC signal connectors.
            Besides heat failure, an extra ohm of resistance at 12 volts leads to a loss of 12 watts of power in heat and thus battery drain.
            If your not worried about current, then either will do. .

            Comment

            • JWLaRue
              Managing Editor, SubCommittee Report
              • Aug 1994
              • 4281

              #7
              Agree....it's a possible issue for high current draw, but based on my experience with R/C subs (both large and small) high current draw isn't an issue.

              -Jeff
              Rohr 1.....Los!

              Comment

              • aeroengineer1
                Junior Member
                • May 2005
                • 241

                #8
                Power lost through resistance is R * I^2. It may seem small, but when I am sizing MOSFETs my projects, anything over a few hundred milliohms is not tolerable to me. A 1Ohm resistor with 1A of current leads to 1W of power being lost in heat. If you were to double that current draw to 2A, the power lost goes to 4W. At 10A it is 100W lost to heat. The heat loss is one thing, but the drain on the battery is another.

                This is not to say that it is an issue, just providing perspective to what it does, and that it does not take a lot of current to add up to a pretty hefty drain on the battery. One last thought is that to measure small resistances usually takes more than a multimeter to get an accurate value. Here is an example of how to do it. There are other ways to do this as well.

                Comment

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