Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty. delivery
1 x receiver
1x remote control with battery
Technical data
Working voltage: DC 12/24V
Silent current: Maximum current: Frequency: 433 MHz
Working temperature: -10~+60°C
Reception sensitivity: >110dbm
Reception range: The open space is more than 50-200 meters
Description about the remote control button
A: ON OFF
B:Change direction
C: Speed Up
D: Speed Down
note: 12v: It is recommended to use motors within 8A 24V: It is recommended to use motors within 5A
Adam J.
Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2024
I ordered this for my son because he likes to build things and he said he wanted one. He said it has worked great for his projects so far!
PKA
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2024
Have not been able to get it to work yet But have not had the time to troubleshoot it. I bought this same model befor and it worked great which is why I bought another. I’ll updat this review after I can tinker with it some more. Based on my experience with the earlier model that I’ve purchased, I would still say this is a good product, I may have just got one that happened to be DOA.
Eric Mockler
Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2024
I set it up to run a motor from a 12v battery and it worked pretty good for a while. The first time I used it for over a minute the magic smoke came out. I may look into what failed and try replacing & adding a heatsink, but that project is off in the future. It says 10A, I would have expected it to hold up better.
KD
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2024
used it for display for art showdid what i needed it toogreat price
corebyte
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2024
The media could not be loaded.
will
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2024
This is one of those things that you oughta have on the bench if you enjoy tinkering with electrical playthings! A million ways to implement it-
cti2019
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2024
This has several flaws that are not good. There is no way to start the motor on a low speed. It forces you to start at max every time. It has 6 speeds, and takes about a second for each of those speeds to take effect, so it will take almost 6 seconds to get the motor down to low speed after turning it on. When you turn it off, and back on, it goes back to max speed. Ironically, it does remember what direction you were going at last. If you turn it on, switch to reverse, turn it off, then turn it on again, it will start in reverse. It seems odd that they made the direction persistent, but not the speed. I can think of several examples where persistent direction would be a bad thing, but zero examples of how persistent speed would be a bad thing. I just think the programming/design of this was not well thought out. Also, the beeper is super loud, and it beeps with each button press. I just peeled the stick off it and drove a screw into the speaker to silence it. Honestly, I'm have a hard time thinking of any application where this would be good. For a garage door, it would ram it full speed up, when it is already up, and full speed down when already down, so it's a no-go there. Ditto for motorized awnings and anything else with limits to the motion. The one and only application that might work is a fan.
Silicon Valley Software Veteran
Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2024
The media could not be loaded.
Recommended Products