Throttle input is not that high just enough to spin the motor and immersed in water is less friction it act as lubricant. Maybe if run dry and 100% throttle input it will completely worn away the. brushes.
My throttle input was just done with the throttle trim and motor was immersed in water Now i do the same for 2 1/2 minutes and the brusches are perfect now
Thanks for the video but if you are making “how to” tutorials don’t put stupid music in the video that makes it hard to hear what you are saying.
why did you put oil on the commutator?
I still do this ,,I've had some brush motors almost be as strong as brushless in the end but brushless is way better
Will it be faster?
Good video, thank you
Remember to do this only with brushed! Brushless doesn't like that kind of "oil inside" treatment.
I never understood what was in the red bottle that I used after taking it out of the water.
That's a lighter fluid you can buy that in any hardware store.
Yes, that is correct! Its a lighter fluid.
2 minutes in distilled water and a few drops of simple green
why the simpl green?
@@NeoJ4K3 I normally use the simple green on a motor after I ran to help clean-- just habit on breakin
@@toddshobbyzone659 hmm, my kit just came in today, maybe illtakr your advice on the simple green
Make sure you oil up bushings afterwards
20 min way to long
Brushes completely worn away on new motor
Throttle input is not that high just enough to spin the motor and immersed in water is less friction it act as lubricant. Maybe if run dry and 100% throttle input it will completely worn away the. brushes.
My throttle input was just done with the throttle trim and motor was immersed in water
Now i do the same for 2 1/2 minutes and the brusches are perfect now
What the hell are you recording on a 5 dollar camera. People in the Philippines don't have decent cameras or what. Looks like your phone is from 2005
Im recording it using a potato! 😂