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A pair of 1/2w zeners, back to back, in series with one motor lead, will also allow you to run the motor on a full 12v, and thezeners will drop a fixed amount that won't vary with load. The only drawback is that the engine won't move until you turn the throttle up past the zener voltage, so if you have a 6v motor, and you put some 6.2v zeners in there, the motor won't see anything until the throttle gets up to 6.2 volts. Personally, I don't mind this and it's handy because things like LEDs will come well up to full brightness before the engine moves.1/2w zeners are pretty small.
Hi Max. That works well on straight voltage but for slow speed control I was recommending a low frequency PWM controller and in my tests the Zeners didn't work well with those. They are still pulsing full voltage, in this case 12V, and as such still got the motor creeping even at a low throttle position because the voltage pulses were still above the Zener limiting value and as such, passed through those pulses. They are limited but are still there and the motor started turning. I quit using them because of this.
I've done it twice and the screws didn't fit either time I was wondering if the Kato holes were even threaded at all.Even in the one photo I took of both motors it looks like the Kato holes aren't threaded.Maybe they can self tab into there but after a few seconds of trying I just used the tape.
Now, if you can control the amp load - it still works. Do the same stunt to a high rpm reduction gearhead like the Solarbotics GM15A and it worked great, resistor didn't heat, and even at full slip it just chugs along. Because the current, given the mechanical advantage of the gearhead, remains relatively constant.