The puck outputs PWM, not PPM
If VESC was silly enough to call chicken turkey, would you still call it turkey, even though you knew it was chicken?
of course we would
Might as well call the motors fans while we’re at it I mean, they both spin, so what’s the difference.
My motors are known as merry-go-rounds
I won’t call motors fans, but I will gladly just start calling all fans “motors” and never referring to them as fans again.
Oh boy, here I go projecting again.
@DerelictRobot loves following me around, I think I make his dick hard
I think you need a hug, buddy
Brian, you’ve been asked to stop talking about my genitals before. Let’s not pull 2-Dads back into the mix.
So we’re clear: I do not consent to you sexualizing conversation with me, it’s off topic and inappropriate. Cheers.
Back on topic:
Care to explain your reasoning here?
Andrew, it’s painfully obvious you show up only to attack people and start drama.
You’re certainly not ever around when noobs need help, just crickets.
Your priority is clearly starting drama.
I think you need a hug, buddy boy
I’ll give him a big hug for you tomorrow.
The hatchet will be buried.
Is that what the kids are calling it these days?
Edit: Oh wait, I’m so sorry. @Venom121212 and @DerelictRobot, do I have your consent to brutally and shamelessly sexualize every one of your interactions for my own sick gratification?
Consent matters, kids
I thought that was your nipple tassels
Bold of you to assume the tassels aren’t motorised
But are they PPM or PWM controlled?
I just plug them directly to the battery, no fuckery required
I don’t want to speak for @b264 , but I get the impression he values redundancy in his builds. Using a mini-remote, having multiple receivers is potentially insurance against signal intererence?
Unfortunately this isn’t how redundancy works. Adding extra components doesn’t magically create redundancy without solving for additional points of failure and implementing true redundant fail-safes.
It’s unequivocally less safe than a direct wire connections between a single receiver and your ESC.
Source: I am an embedded systems engineer with a decade+ of experience developing control systems.