Find the right battery

HongRC

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Hi all, I just received the Arrma Mojave, but now I can't seem to find a straight answer as to which lipo batteries to run on this unit. I've read that certain battery combinations can burn out the drivetrain. I called Ovonic service and they recommended me their Rebel Series batteries, no answer to my original query.
How much voltage should I run, single or dual battery, and how much mAh? I would appreciate it if you could help me!
 
Hi all, I just received the Arrma Mojave, but now I can't seem to find a straight answer as to which lipo batteries to run on this unit. I've read that certain battery combinations can burn out the drivetrain. I called Ovonic service and they recommended me their Rebel Series batteries, no answer to my original query.
How much voltage should I run, single or dual battery, and how much mAh? I would appreciate it if you could help me!

https://www.arrmaforum.com/ would probably be a more comprehensive place to ask Mojave-specific questions (basically all of their 6S lineup is interchangeable), but since I have a little experience, maybe I can help.

From Arrma's literature: "4S or 6S Lipo (Hard or soft-case) within dimensions 158 x 48 x 70mm or 6.22 x 1.89 x 2.76 inches"

You will need to look at your ESC connector. There are different versions of the Mojave that come with different electronics (and a different ESC connector). If you have the more common version, it has spectrum electronics and uses their IC5 connector which is backwards compatible to EC5. I would try to find a battery with that connector and not use an adapter if possible.

Batteries have three primary specifications: voltage, capacity, and discharge rate. I'm going to oversimplify this and say voltage is "horsepower." A 6S battery will provide more horespower/top speed than a 4S one. The important thing is that any given motor and any given ESC are designed to work within a specific voltage range. Do not put more than a 6S battery in that Mojave, and do not put less than a 4S battery. Discharge rate is the "C" rating. Think of this as "torque." The higher the C rating, the more punch out of the hole it's going to have. Capacity is just that - how big the battery is - how long of a run time you will have. A 8000mah battery will last twice as long as a 4000mah battery. The capacity in no way affects "horsepower" or "torque."

https://www.amazon.com/Spektrum-22-...sprefix=mojave+spectrum+battery,aps,77&sr=8-2

This is the super high end of the range for what would work for you, but it gives you a starting point. Correct battery dimensions, correct connector, correct voltage. Good discharge rate and capacity. 100-120C is a very, very high performance battery. This particular one is a "smart" battery designed to work with spectrum's smart chargers and if you have the mojave with spectrum electronics and you're anxious about getting into this, I recommend you start with an all-compatible system even if you have to shell out for it a little more. You can modify down the road as you get more comfortable.
 
I have a Mojave, I run 4s, 2 2s 5200 mah 50c batteries from Lectron Pro, you can run either a single 4s or 2 3s or single 6s Lipo, hope this helps
 
https://www.arrmaforum.com/ would probably be a more comprehensive place to ask Mojave-specific questions (basically all of their 6S lineup is interchangeable), but since I have a little experience, maybe I can help.

From Arrma's literature: "4S or 6S Lipo (Hard or soft-case) within dimensions 158 x 48 x 70mm or 6.22 x 1.89 x 2.76 inches"

You will need to look at your ESC connector. There are different versions of the Mojave that come with different electronics (and a different ESC connector). If you have the more common version, it has spectrum electronics and uses their IC5 connector which is backwards compatible to EC5. I would try to find a battery with that connector and not use an adapter if possible.

Batteries have three primary specifications: voltage, capacity, and discharge rate. I'm going to oversimplify this and say voltage is "horsepower." A 6S battery will provide more horespower/top speed than a 4S one. The important thing is that any given motor and any given ESC are designed to work within a specific voltage range. Do not put more than a 6S battery in that Mojave, and do not put less than a 4S battery. Discharge rate is the "C" rating. Think of this as "torque." The higher the C rating, the more punch out of the hole it's going to have. Capacity is just that - how big the battery is - how long of a run time you will have. A 8000mah battery will last twice as long as a 4000mah battery. The capacity in no way affects "horsepower" or "torque."

https://www.amazon.com/Spektrum-22-2V-5000mAh-Battery-SPMX50006S100/dp/B07QF9CD4J/ref=sr_1_2?crid=2QDSTCZT4IDXS&keywords=mojave+spektrum+battery&qid=1663248691&sprefix=mojave+spectrum+battery,aps,77&sr=8-2

This is the super high end of the range for what would work for you, but it gives you a starting point. Correct battery dimensions, correct connector, correct voltage. Good discharge rate and capacity. 100-120C is a very, very high performance battery. This particular one is a "smart" battery designed to work with spectrum's smart chargers and if you have the mojave with spectrum electronics and you're anxious about getting into this, I recommend you start with an all-compatible system even if you have to shell out for it a little more. You can modify down the road as you get more comfortable.

In theory those should be high performance batteries but they actually fall towards the lower end of the spectrum.
All 2021 LPB Results (2).Jpg

I have a set of these I run in my Kraton EXB,has the same battery tray as the Mojave they come with the proper connector and fit great https://chinahobbyline.com/products...-battery-with-ec5-plug?variant=42646850109654 and I just noticed they are sold out.

This one also fits but just barely it is a tight squeeze into the battery tray but you would want to solder on an EC5 connector https://hobbyking.com/en_us/turnigy-battery-heavy-duty-5000mah-6s-60c-lipo-pack-xt-90.html

15422422041202527589079028365622.jpg

But like @95PGTTech said the Arrma forums would be a better place for this question I'm a staff member over there come on by and say hi https://www.arrmaforum.com/threads/what-is-your-rc-lipo-of-choice-in-2022.49890/
 
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