Motor Recommendation for tiny trainer?

Donsity

Member
Hey all. I currently have a nice electronics setup but I have a A2212 1400KV 10T brushless outrunner motor which I think is a bit too powerful...


a nice link to an affordable motor for the tiny trainer would make my day.


Thanks!
 

Donsity

Member
It's more than the TT needs, but not ridiculously over sized. The price is right.

my last question is will my 2212 1400kv be way too much
I believe that the Tiny Trainer recommends the Power Pack A, which is an 1806 motor, so
Here is a possibility:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08P5MYWMH/?tag=lstir-20

You might also look at maybe some 2204 size motors.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0799K2C3S/?tag=lstir-20

For the first motor you sent, will I have to solder it into the ESC?
 

luvmy40

Elite member
And the one that I sent a link of is the same motor of the kit... will go with that then
OK,
I took a look at the ToTsRC page for that motor. I do remember vividly, mine is marked 8T witch, from the pics on the web site, is the 2600.
 

luvmy40

Elite member
That motor/ESC/prop combo on a 3S 1300 battery works great with trainer wing at lower throttle settings and is a rocket with the sport wing when you want it to be(or when you don't if you're not paying attention!).
 

luvmy40

Elite member
Either will probably work well, but I am far from expert on motor/prop choice. I can only tell you what I have whether it works. I have no idea if it is optimal.
 

Donsity

Member
Either will probably work well, but I am far from expert on motor/prop choice. I can only tell you what I have whether it works. I have no idea if it is optimal.

Appreciate it. Will get the one on amazon because it's a bit smaller.

(off topic)

Hopefully I'll be able to learn on planes similar to the tiny trainer and then build a mini speedster because it can use most of the same electronics.... I was almost thinking of starting with planes like the mini speedster and the slow flyer because those ones are much easier to build (smaller)
 

luvmy40

Elite member
The mini Speedster is a fun, easy build, but it is not a durable plane. I went through a couple before I decided to go slow and big to get more actual stick time in.

The Slow Flyer is quite nice to fly and not a difficult build. You just need to pay attention to getting the wing symetrical and even.
 

ColoFlyer

Active member
my last question is will my 2212 1400kv be way too much


For the first motor you sent, will I have to solder it into the ESC?

I would not solder the motor directly to the ESC, in most cases you will use bullet connectors on the motor and the ESC. Once soldered on use shrink wrap to cover the bullet connectors, then plug them together. There are plenty of videos out there on how to attach the connectors to the Motor and the Esc.
Here is just one of them:

Bullet connectors come in several sizes, but for this motor I would use a smaller connector, like this one.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07H97G7NY/?tag=lstir-20
 

flyinsparky

Member
Appreciate it. Will get the one on amazon because it's a bit smaller.

(off topic)

Hopefully I'll be able to learn on planes similar to the tiny trainer and then build a mini speedster because it can use most of the same electronics.... I was almost thinking of starting with planes like the mini speedster and the slow flyer because those ones are much easier to build (smaller)

I think the Tiny Trainer is the perfect plane to learn on. It actually ended up being my most flown plane once I went from the dihedral wing to the aileron wing.

I went with something like this:
https://a.co/d/4Mv2ayM
The 1806 size gives me plenty of pep. I use a 6x4E prop and 2S and 3S batteries ranging from 450 to 800mah.