Tag Archives: tension

Radiomaster Ratchet on Throttle/Winch Joystick..!!

Are you a mainsheet ratchet fan? I admit that I am, but at our club opinion is pretty passionately divided !!

In my transmitter collection, the Futabas have a ratchet as standard and the Spektrums have a ratchet you can switch on and off from outside the front cover (nice!).

However, I always thought that Radiomaster has no ratchet capability. It turns out that is probably true for my Radiomaster Pocket,… but if you have a Radiomaster with AG01 or AG02 CNC machined gimbals (eg Boxer or TX15 ) there is a ratchet in there. You do have to go inside to switch it on/off or adjust it though.

Ratchet and gimbal tension are both screw adjustable on a simple (crude!) pair of spring friction levers inside. You might also need a little “hack” if you find your ratchet adjustment spring sticks on the adjustment screw thread.

This little video (below) is a tour of the whole AG01 Gimbal joystick. (worth watching if you have a Radiomaster). If you skip forward to minute 4’15” you will arrive at the video section about adjusting the ratchet and gimbal tension – with the “hack” !!

Click here to see it:-

https://youtu.be/K8aRgndgyp0

Calibrate Your Backstays, Anyone??!!

When HS and I raced our International Dragon over at Medway Yacht Club, we were forever adjusting our backstay tension… just like radio sailing. Calibrating the rig so you could see and record what you were doing was just as vital – on backstays, …not as easy as it sounds!!

So for the same reasons, we constantly adjust backstays in radio sailing. What is a way to know “where you are” with your adjustment?

I was lucky enough to get a new IOM from SailboatRC last October. I’m only just getting to use it really. I bought the version of their package where the factory sets up all the rigs for you too. (Not that you’d notice in my results – ha ha !). On the three rigs (A,B,C) when they have the backstays set up correctly in the factory they run a fine black pen over the lines leaving you with a black dot on both sides of the loop. So line up the two dots, and you are back to where the standard factory setting – “voila”, I thought !!

The thing is that inevitably the owner, and at Datchet all the experts who come to help(!)… all have a tweak of the backstay. It’s quite difficult to see it clearly whether it’s your own hand on the bowsie in the way, or someone else’s.

So I went down to the stationers and bought a very fine permanent red pen plus the same thing in black. Now look at the photo above :-

On the bowsie side of the adjustment loop, I marked the factory dot in red colour. It is on the right hand side of this photo. Then I took the black pen and a ruler and placed, for now, a black dot 1cm above the factory mark and a second dot 1cm below the factory mark. It’s a 2:1 adjustment of course, but now I can see half a cm above and below the (centre) factory mark. I suspect I might have to add a further two dots, making five in total, but let’s see how we go.