The problem
In my experience the most sensitive part of a Heli is the tail rotor.
I started out with belt driven tail rotors, and they were forgiving if I happened to land a bit on rock etc, but still the delicate pitch arm mechanisms or the tail rotor shaft would get hurt and after that create vibrations. Later, came the torque tube solution, it claimed to be more efficient, maybe true but SOOO much more unforgiving if you even touch some high grass while landing. Some of the small gears would get very small indents that would create vibrations and you really had to change all torque gears to get back to operation.
After having both my 250 size Heli’s grounded, one belt and the other torque tube tails, due to tail rotor problems I just took a very long rest from this tiring situation.
They were just sitting there for a long time, all intact and ready to fly if not the tail issues.
My solution
I was inspired to see so many new Helis working fine with motor driven tails I thought I would give it a try to convert the torque tube 250. I think the result is very promising.
So, want to share my learning if any one like to walk down this path.
Librepilot Heli is my preferred FC for sport 3D flying, not going waypoints or GPS stuff. If you want that, Ardupilot is my choice.
Starting point
The trex 250 has physical tail mechanism for pitch control and a tail servo to drive it, the power rotation comes from the toque tube feeding off the main rotor motor.
This will all be changed into a digital mechanism controlling the RPM of a tail motor.
What we can throw away is
. the tail mechanism for pitch control
. the blades and shaft housing etc
. the toque tube and its drivers
. the tail pitch servo
What we need to add is
. a motor
. an electronic speed controller
. a propeller
I was using half of the tail housing to mount the motor on to it.
This is the new tail rotor motor set up.
The ESC connects with the power wires running inside the tail boom and is mounted where the tail servo previously was mounted. The control wires for the ESC are connected to the OpenPilot Revo Nano flight controller’s Yaw output.
. props size specs:
GEMFAN 3052 Three-Blade Propeller
Rotation diameter 76.2mm
Center hole thickness: 8mm
. esc specs:
I mounted the motor on the left side of the tail boom. The standard way to do it is on the right side. The reason is the weight of the motor on the left side will help the Heli to have a closer to zero roll attitude in hover. If, place it on the right side the weight would have increased the tilt angle even more.
For the rotation direction of the tail prop, I wanted it to have the inner side of the prop to rotate upwards to meet the downwash from the main rotor to be more effective in normal flight. That means its turning in a clockwise rotation. That defined I needed to choose a clockwise angled prop.
The difficulties
The weight taken out was around 30 grams. But with the motor mounted far out on the tail boom meant the CoG was moved aft, a lot. So needed to ad ballast in the nose of the cyanope to compensate. Needed around 30 grams. This could really have been avoided by using a much smaller tail motor. I don’t even need more than 40-60% of the thrust this one produces. Better smaller motor, lower weight, less or no need of ballast in the nose. I think this motor could be good to convert my 450 size Helis.
Two other problems, to avoid the rotor prop to spin up dangerously when connecting the LiPo, the Idle up setting not only cut the main rotor motor but also cut the yaw input to zero. The other problem was how to select the neutral point in the radio channel input so it will have enough yaw authority when flying. At neutral the tail motor will have to run at some speed, defined by the neutral point. Now I think I have got it set okay, its flyable but likely can be tweaked much better.
I will add my settings file here.
So far, I have resurrected one of my two 250 Helis
I feel good about this, its promising