I really admire your understanding of all the electronics that are involved in your projects. Electronics has always been a weakness for me. I have a basic understanding but you really have the in depth knowledge. Love your content.
You did such an awesome job on the design and build. Being able to transmit long distance is great. Excellent job buddy. 👍⚡ The box that holds the display looks fine. It just needs a face plate and I'm sure you'll make a nice on.
@@RCWalletVacuum No big deal but when you go into production I would like mine to be all black. ha ha I'm just happy for you that your projects are all coming together so well. ✌
I would love to see some short videos on more basic stuff. Perhaps you could explain how to make a capacitor out of common stuff. My Son has made some using wine bottles filled with salt water and wrapped in tinfoil. I guess the large caps are expensive so he was trying to save money. The anodize video you did was really helpful to a simple man like me. Very useful.
Hey RC, well the upcoming videos this winter are going to be a bit involve because i plan on hand building a 1/5th scale Snocat, tube chassis and all. Was your son able to get a Farad reading on that capacitor?
@@RCWalletVacuum That sounds great. Don't rush a good thing. I'm just shooting videos of toy cars when I get the time. I will definitely be looking forward to your next project. As for my Son same name as you... He went to a trade tech collage and like you he is extremely well versed in controls. Making the big buck like you. Anyways the home made caps he ganged together in a bucket and with a home made high voltage stick he drew an arc about 3" long and 1/4" round of just pure orange and white light when he discharged it. He has been working on his mock up "tesla coil." It's about 8ft tall and looks similar to the original one that Nikola Tesla made. It functions but he needs a different transformer as he keeps kicking the main at the Trailor park he stays at. Long story short he is way smarter than me. My last 10 years working at Boeing mostly involved escorting contractors in and out of skiffs and vaults. Oh yes I also was responsible for the plant wide PA system. The only complicated part of being an "expert PA guy" was knowing how to program the TOA Exchange. Basically 64 relays that were controlled by master stations at different locations. Programing involved using a VB program and filling in the squares with the up down arrows and hitting enter if you wanted that zone to get break bells or to assign call numbers ect.. You know "Phone Lines". The plant had it's own Switch Room a guy from Verizon mostly just there in case of problems. I could go on for ever but it's all probably still Top Secret. I single handedly removed all the crappy Executone amps and went with Bogens and QSC stuff. I counted them 134 amplifiers replace by me. I loved that job. I probably completed about 1000 trouble calls of people complaining about the volume. If you have 200 people per floor in wide open areas it's difficult to achieve without adding speakers. My fix was fake attenuators that I would mount to the cubicle of the complainant. They actually thought it worked and praised me for a fine job. The HVAC guys would mount dummy stats and accomplish the same affect. All of our customers loved us.
@@RCRoads Sounds like you had a lot of accomplishments there. Have you seen how far down the drain Boeing now has become with their incompetent management? Sad state of affairs
@@RCWalletVacuum Anytime a US company outsources work it's a nightmare. The fuselage built in China ends up saving tons of money but it's just 3mm under size for properly joining to the cockpit. I blame it all on All Gore and George Soros.
Hey Kyle, are you enjoying this lovely weather? I piled on some more dirt to the jumps and berms for next season so be ready to come out and give it a test. Thanks for checking it out buddy
@@RCWalletVacuum awesome stuff Brian! Yea it’s a good time to be a duck 🦆. This was weekend was the last camping trip of the year and let’s just say Sunday was a very wet one 😂
I really admire your understanding of all the electronics that are involved in your projects. Electronics has always been a weakness for me. I have a basic understanding but you really have the in depth knowledge.
Love your content.
Thanks buddy, but trust me electronics and programming tends to be a major pain in the ass, but it does have its uses, lol. Thanks for checking it out
You did such an awesome job on the design and build. Being able to transmit long distance is great. Excellent job buddy. 👍⚡ The box that holds the display looks fine. It just needs a face plate and I'm sure you'll make a nice on.
Thanks Rc, The box was designed in a bit of a rush so its missing a couple of features, like SD card access. Thanks for checking it out buddy
@@RCWalletVacuum No big deal but when you go into production I would like mine to be all black. ha ha I'm just happy for you that your projects are all coming together so well. ✌
It's amazing what you can do with an RC.
Thanks for sharing Brian 👊👍
Thanks Cyclone, it need some refinement but it should be a handy tool for tuning. Thanks for checking it out
I would love to see some short videos on more basic stuff. Perhaps you could explain how to make a capacitor out of common stuff. My Son has made some using wine bottles filled with salt water and wrapped in tinfoil. I guess the large caps are expensive so he was trying to save money. The anodize video you did was really helpful to a simple man like me. Very useful.
Hey RC, well the upcoming videos this winter are going to be a bit involve because i plan on hand building a 1/5th scale Snocat, tube chassis and all. Was your son able to get a Farad reading on that capacitor?
@@RCWalletVacuum That sounds great. Don't rush a good thing. I'm just shooting videos of toy cars when I get the time. I will definitely be looking forward to your next project. As for my Son same name as you... He went to a trade tech collage and like you he is extremely well versed in controls. Making the big buck like you. Anyways the home made caps he ganged together in a bucket and with a home made high voltage stick he drew an arc about 3" long and 1/4" round of just pure orange and white light when he discharged it. He has been working on his mock up "tesla coil." It's about 8ft tall and looks similar to the original one that Nikola Tesla made. It functions but he needs a different transformer as he keeps kicking the main at the Trailor park he stays at. Long story short he is way smarter than me. My last 10 years working at Boeing mostly involved escorting contractors in and out of skiffs and vaults. Oh yes I also was responsible for the plant wide PA system. The only complicated part of being an "expert PA guy" was knowing how to program the TOA Exchange. Basically 64 relays that were controlled by master stations at different locations. Programing involved using a VB program and filling in the squares with the up down arrows and hitting enter if you wanted that zone to get break bells or to assign call numbers ect.. You know "Phone Lines". The plant had it's own Switch Room a guy from Verizon mostly just there in case of problems. I could go on for ever but it's all probably still Top Secret. I single handedly removed all the crappy Executone amps and went with Bogens and QSC stuff. I counted them 134 amplifiers replace by me. I loved that job. I probably completed about 1000 trouble calls of people complaining about the volume. If you have 200 people per floor in wide open areas it's difficult to achieve without adding speakers. My fix was fake attenuators that I would mount to the cubicle of the complainant. They actually thought it worked and praised me for a fine job. The HVAC guys would mount dummy stats and accomplish the same affect. All of our customers loved us.
@@RCRoads Sounds like you had a lot of accomplishments there. Have you seen how far down the drain Boeing now has become with their incompetent management? Sad state of affairs
@@RCWalletVacuum Anytime a US company outsources work it's a nightmare. The fuselage built in China ends up saving tons of money but it's just 3mm under size for properly joining to the cockpit. I blame it all on All Gore and George Soros.
Cool stuff brother! Looks like the trials and tribulations are paying off
Hey Kyle, are you enjoying this lovely weather? I piled on some more dirt to the jumps and berms for next season so be ready to come out and give it a test. Thanks for checking it out buddy
@@RCWalletVacuum awesome stuff Brian! Yea it’s a good time to be a duck 🦆. This was weekend was the last camping trip of the year and let’s just say Sunday was a very wet one 😂
Good work Brian 👌👍
Thanks Robert. I'm hoping for a field test soon. Thanks for checking it out
Hey Brian great video 🤙🏼 I’m sure from when I had my tachometer my big bore idled at 2-3000 rpm 😉
Hey Ben, thanks for the info, the load side rpm was what i was most interested in knowing
Very cool excellent project should be interesting 👍
Thanks BlueSmoke, and thanks for checking it out
Great job my friend, thanks for sharing... Like and New Follower
Thanks you sir and i will be sending a sub your way
👍👍
👌👍👍