larsb
1 MW
EG:s own summary on Revolt motor quality:
ElectricGod said:I did a bit more scrutinizing of the RV-100E and found a few things that are less than wonderful. Revolt is still failing on the details! GRRR! Horrific motors...no not really, but the entire product line does suffer from assembly and quality issues. The entire product line has things that are soooo easy to fix and aren't and then in other areas the attention to detail is really good. The stators are clearly dipped in lacquer after they are fully assembled, but the bearings are dipped too which means they get polluted with hardened lacquer. It's almost like machining and winding is done by one group and then assembly is done by uneducated dumb asses.
Just an opinion about Revolt...
I think they are cheap ass skin flints! They cut corners anywhere they can get away with it.
1. Sub-optimal hall placement.
2. Using pliers to smash a ferrol instead of a 6 point crimper.
3. Not using a crimp ferrule at all like in all the Regular motors.
4. Not using .3mm lams on the Regular motors.
5. Single short keys where dual longer ones need to be used.
6. Using unskilled and cheap labor for assembling motors.
7. Lack of attention to details.
8. Poor quality control.
9. Complete inability to fix or modify any existing design EVER to resolve known issues.
10. No included motor bases.
I pulled apart the phase ends on the RV-100E and all 3 of them were smashed together in a flattened ferrol and then soldered. Better than the butt soldering in the RV-120-regular, but still pretty pathetic. I took apart the 3 connections and redid all of them. From the factory, it will work, but Revolt could have put a bit more effort into this connection and used a crimper instead of pliers.
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When I took apart one of them, I found that about 1/8" of wire ends were in the smashed ferrule. The smashed ferrol is 1/2" long and they had barely 1/8 of the winding end inside. Whoever wired up this motor really sucks!
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I found this previously. Now I know why the phase end was so short. Pulling back those very short ends shown above, I was then at this bodge in the wind and was able to break it loose from the cured lacquer. This gave me the length needed to properly crimp and solder the winding end 1/4" deep inside the ferrol.
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I used ferrules, crimped around the wires on 6 sides (not smashed flat) and then soldered to redo all the connections. They are each covered in 2 layers of heat shrink.
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The halls and temp sensor come out in a 7 pin connector. I'm not overly fond of non-waterproof connectors so I replaced this with an IP68 connector.
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The hall board is kind of cool how it mounts via 2 hidden screws that you access from the bottom of the motor.
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I think I did this. The wires were super glued to the hall board and pulling out the board stripped off the wire insulation.
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I pulled all 5 wires for halls, stripped new ends and soldered them back in place. While there, I repositioned the pull-up resistors and buried them in thermal glue. I can't imagine why Revolt thought leaving them unsecured was OK. The hall cable is silicon wires inside a silicon outer insulator...not bad!
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