Fun, Learning, Friendship and Mutual Respect START  HERE


Unregistered
Go Back   HeliFreak > R/C Helicopter Support > Blade Helicopters (eFlite) > Blade 450


Blade 450 Blade 450 Helicopters Information and Help


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-03-2012, 09:59 AM   #1 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Mar 2012
Default Black dust/residue on main gear

As the subject says, I've got some black stuff on the top of my main gear. Not on the teeth, but on the body of the gear.

Is this common? Or am I getting wear that is out of the ordinary. I've probably flown 20-30 packs through it by now.
__________________
Helis: Blade 120 SR (duct collector), mCPX V2, 450 3D
Transmitters: DX6i, DX5e, 120sr stocky
Sim: Phoenix
aaronbru is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Sponsored Links
Advertisement
 
Old 05-03-2012, 10:08 AM   #2 (permalink)
Registered Users
 

Join Date: Mar 2012
Default

I'm curious myself honestly. Could it be the gear rubbing against the body? Tail belt a little too tight? Black gear that leads from the bottom gear to the tail?

Thats all I can really think of in terms of the black stuff.
TZZDC1241 is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-03-2012, 11:00 AM   #3 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 557
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Dec 2011
Default

Pull your motor, I'll bet you find black dust on the bottom of it and possibly a groove ground into the motor shaft.
__________________
Blade 450, Scorpion 2213-14 motor, Quark Gyro - cheapo blades
Blade MCPx V2 - Now Brushless!
buddha2490 is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-03-2012, 03:13 PM   #4 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Jul 2011
Default

It could be oil/grease from the OWB. Wipe it off and see if it comes back.
__________________
Tarot 450 Pro V2 FBL - Blade mCP X - Blade 450 3D FBL
FuntanaS is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-03-2012, 03:49 PM   #5 (permalink)
Registered Users
 

Join Date: Jan 2012
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by buddha2490 View Post
Pull your motor, I'll bet you find black dust on the bottom of it and possibly a groove ground into the motor shaft.
Yep, what he said. If you find black dust underneath the motor is probably time for a new one. The motor shaft has a tendency to rotate in the bearing and that will wear a groove in it over time. If you search this forum you can find a few temporary fixes but in the end, you're better off just buying a new motor. Unfortunately, you can't simply buy a replacement shaft.
DJtoad is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-04-2012, 07:47 AM   #6 (permalink)
Registered Users
Thread Starter Thread Starter
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Mar 2012
Default

If I do find that to be the issue, should I step up to the 440 motor?
__________________
Helis: Blade 120 SR (duct collector), mCPX V2, 450 3D
Transmitters: DX6i, DX5e, 120sr stocky
Sim: Phoenix
aaronbru is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-04-2012, 09:51 AM   #7 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 557
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Dec 2011
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by aaronbru View Post
If I do find that to be the issue, should I step up to the 440 motor?
If you want to... or you could go with a different brand.
__________________
Blade 450, Scorpion 2213-14 motor, Quark Gyro - cheapo blades
Blade MCPx V2 - Now Brushless!
buddha2490 is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-04-2012, 03:04 PM   #8 (permalink)
Registered Users
Thread Starter Thread Starter
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Mar 2012
Default

And if I don't fix it?? Haha. What if I just let it go? I imagine it will start getting some sort of TBE combined with vibrations.

Not of fan of replacing a motor. I've never even had a blade strike with this thing.
__________________
Helis: Blade 120 SR (duct collector), mCPX V2, 450 3D
Transmitters: DX6i, DX5e, 120sr stocky
Sim: Phoenix
aaronbru is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-04-2012, 03:13 PM   #9 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 557
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Dec 2011
Default

If it is indeed failing and you don't fix it.. You will begin to hear it grinding more and more and eventually you will have to do something about it or stop flying. I'm not saying that you are in an emergency situation here, just pull the motor every once in a while and monitor it. Its a good idea to do that anyway as part of normal maintenance.

One thing you can do is order some motor bearing lube from Scorpion, it's only a few bucks. Maintaining the motor bearings may not ultimately save your motor, but it will definitely lengthen its life. Then you can use that same lube on the rest of the bearings in the heli and lengthen their lives.Also make good and sure that your gear mesh is correct; again, may not save your motor, but will stress it out a lot less. You would have to do all this if you got an aftermarket motor or it would fail too, may as well start now.

Its a good habit.
__________________
Blade 450, Scorpion 2213-14 motor, Quark Gyro - cheapo blades
Blade MCPx V2 - Now Brushless!
buddha2490 is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-07-2012, 02:53 AM   #10 (permalink)
Registered Users
 

Join Date: Mar 2012
Cool

Quote:
Originally Posted by buddha2490 View Post
If it is indeed failing and you don't fix it.. You will begin to hear it grinding more and more and eventually you will have to do something about it or stop flying. I'm not saying that you are in an emergency situation here, just pull the motor every once in a while and monitor it. Its a good idea to do that anyway as part of normal maintenance.

One thing you can do is order some motor bearing lube from Scorpion, it's only a few bucks. Maintaining the motor bearings may not ultimately save your motor, but it will definitely lengthen its life. Then you can use that same lube on the rest of the bearings in the heli and lengthen their lives.Also make good and sure that your gear mesh is correct; again, may not save your motor, but will stress it out a lot less. You would have to do all this if you got an aftermarket motor or it would fail too, may as well start now.

Its a good habit.
+1 superb advice!
HeliNutter is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-07-2012, 10:14 AM   #11 (permalink)
Registered Users
Thread Starter Thread Starter
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Mar 2012
Default

thanks for the help.
__________________
Helis: Blade 120 SR (duct collector), mCPX V2, 450 3D
Transmitters: DX6i, DX5e, 120sr stocky
Sim: Phoenix
aaronbru is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-07-2012, 02:02 PM   #12 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 274
 

Join Date: Jul 2011
Default

I think the easiest way to detect a bad motor bearing early on is to just check the motor temperature after each flight. Once the bearing starts going, it will start getting pretty hot. I just grab the motor after unplugging the battery to see if it's hot. What is "too hot"? Grab your dust-ejecting motor after your next flight and I bet it is "too hot".

IIRC, the stock motor when new was only slightly warm after six minutes of circuits in 70 F weather. I have a scorpion now, and that's how it is, as is the 440 in my 450-X (after five minutes). Just warm, no one would call it "hot".

On my third e-flight motor, I noticed it getting hot ("ouch!") that way, pulled it, blew away all the black dust and bits of circlip/bearing, and avoided another unplanned auto. If your motor is running "hot" and you don't want to change it out, stay away from the babies & puppies because you could be coming down at any instant.

Bigger helis or harder flying might result in a hotter motor, but I can't speak to that.
__________________
John
jdFin is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-07-2012, 02:43 PM   #13 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 557
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Dec 2011
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jdFin View Post
I think the easiest way to detect a bad motor bearing early on is to just check the motor temperature after each flight. Once the bearing starts going, it will start getting pretty hot. I just grab the motor after unplugging the battery to see if it's hot. What is "too hot"? Grab your dust-ejecting motor after your next flight and I bet it is "too hot".

IIRC, the stock motor when new was only slightly warm after six minutes of circuits in 70 F weather. I have a scorpion now, and that's how it is, as is the 440 in my 450-X (after five minutes). Just warm, no one would call it "hot".

On my third e-flight motor, I noticed it getting hot ("ouch!") that way, pulled it, blew away all the black dust and bits of circlip/bearing, and avoided another unplanned auto. If your motor is running "hot" and you don't want to change it out, stay away from the babies & puppies because you could be coming down at any instant.

Bigger helis or harder flying might result in a hotter motor, but I can't speak to that.
That's funny you should mention that, because now that you pointed it out, that's exactly my experience. I remember my eflite motor getting very hot towards the end of its life and thinking that it was a recent phenomenon, but didn't link it to it failing. But you're right, my scorpion always comes down barely warm.

Neat!
__________________
Blade 450, Scorpion 2213-14 motor, Quark Gyro - cheapo blades
Blade MCPx V2 - Now Brushless!
buddha2490 is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-07-2012, 03:15 PM   #14 (permalink)
Registered Users
 
Posts: 188
 

Join Date: Jan 2012
Default

The 440h motor in the 450x does the exact same thing. Take the motor apart and put blue lock tite in the bearing race where the shaft goes. Let lock tite cure before putting the motor back in the heli. The fix is good for maybe 50+ flights. If the shaft is worn you can build it up with Ca and then sand down smooth before doing the lock tite thing.
TDMModels is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Old 05-09-2012, 08:53 AM   #15 (permalink)
Registered Users
Thread Starter Thread Starter
 
My HF Map location
Join Date: Mar 2012
Default

I have blue loctite and motor bearing lube on the way.

I've been putting off these one time costs for a while but it's about time I get that stuff.
__________________
Helis: Blade 120 SR (duct collector), mCPX V2, 450 3D
Transmitters: DX6i, DX5e, 120sr stocky
Sim: Phoenix
aaronbru is offline        Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Reply




Quick Reply
Message:
Options

Register Now

In order to be able to post messages on the HeliFreak forums, you must first register.
Please enter your desired user name, your REAL and WORKING email address and other required details in the form below.
User Name:
Password
Please enter a password for your user account. Note that passwords are case-sensitive.
Password:
Confirm Password:
Email Address
Please enter a valid email address for yourself. Use a real email address or you will not be granted access to the site. Thank you.
Email Address:
Location
Where do you live? ie: Country, State, City or General Geographic Location please.
Name and Lastname
Enter name and last name here. (This information is not shown to the general public. Optional)
Helicopter #1
Enter Helicopter #1 type and equipment.
Helicopter #2
Enter Helicopter #2 type and equipment.
Helicopter #3
Enter Helicopter #3 type and equipment.
Helicopter #4
Enter Helicopter #4 type and equipment.

Log-in


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On




Copyright © Website Acquisitions Inc. All rights reserved.
vBulletin Security provided by vBSecurity v2.2.2 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.

SEO by vBSEO 3.6.1