If the T-bolt ends up costing too much, perhaps a mini XT22 might cost less? Might be interesting finding a small motor with a shaft on both ends though..CDV777-1 wrote:I finished the drawings for the main Mini Thunderbolt parts last night and went by work today and dropped them off so they can give me a quote. There are 25 drawings in all that I submitted. Should be interesting to see how much it will be. Not sure how long it will take for them to let me know the price. If I was working instead of stuck at home I could harass them about getting them done. I'll update when I find out.
A 1/10 scale 3t22 would only have about a 1.5-1.8 inch diameter rotors. It probably wouldn't make very much noise at all.A small 3T22 at 1/10 scale would probably be the size of a bare Model L. .
Yeah. That's all you would have to do. Not much at all.Just need to make a 10-port rotor and a 12-port rotor, fabricate matching stators and find a dual-shaft 3450RPM 120V AC motor. Then make the horns, instakes and maybe even go as far as adding solenoids. Making the rotors would probably be the hardest part
yep. there's a reason they're all cast pieces on full-size sirens; trying to machine one would be a female dog. You can do a simpler one like in Eric's mini thunderbolt but without an impeller you'll need a supply of forced air in order to get any sound out of it.Making the rotors would probably be the hardest part.
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