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That would be a @Bruce question! But I would contact Justin (jmuessig@hydrophase.com) about availability and pricing. He is very responsive, and really a class A+ vendor in terms of customer support, but he may have a waiting list as this is a completely new system.Ok so how can we organize a group buy?
That would be a @Bruce question! But I would contact Justin (jmuessig@hydrophase.com) about availability and pricing. He is very responsive, and really a class A+ vendor in terms of customer support, but he may have a waiting list as this is a completely new system.
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Haha! I love the thumbs up at the end.Here is one more clip showing the system working in the RPM-controlled action. (I'm trying to narrate what I'm doing in the background, but my voice is drowned in wind and engine noise.)
Basically, adjusting the RPM/speed up and down without touching the throttle levers, and also a demo of electronic "single throttle" action. As you can see the engines stay perfectly together (in synch) -- pretty robust.
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@CamboGreat looking system... For anyone that wakeboards the constant speed is so important for the fun factor and safety when you have inexperienced drivers pulling you these boats are super sensitive in the 17-22 mph range. It was not uncommon to have someone driving the boat pulling me and before you know it the speed is at 30mph + . If you wipe out at that speed or just burn your energy holding on until the driver gets back to the optimal speed that takes a lot of fun out of the wakeboarding experience.
Swatski can you post a video going into a fairly sharp u turn with the speed set around 19mph . I'm curious to see if it is able to hold the speed typically the rpm jumps dramatically . My usual spot for wakeboarding is in a cove that requires u turns at each end to stay in the optimal calm spots. The boat is equipped with perfect pass and it drops a few mph while initiating u turns. The 2-4 mph drop is not terrible if the rider stays on the outside they get the whip action that most likely keeps them a few mph faster than the boat.
No idea about firmware upgrades, that is a Justin @Ridesteady question.With the Ridesteady, do you have much control over acceleration from a stop up to the set speed? Does the system support firmware upgrades?
With the Ridesteady, do you have much control over acceleration from a stop up to the set speed? Does the system support firmware upgrades?
@Julian, @OperationROL, you guys may want to follow this thread to up your surfing game.
Well, it will be interesting to compare the Yamaha "drive control" with the Ridesteady in action. But I can tell you right now, the Ridesteady turn/push-knob (optical reader?) is GENIUS. I would pick the knob control over going through Connext menus every time. That KNOB is just super handy.@Ridesteady - Do you employ rate of turn (ROT NMEA 0183 string) in your algorithm? If not that could be something worth trying to help with turns by upping the correction amount as the ROT absolute value increases in advance of speed decreasing and dropping the correction as ROT absolute value decreases in advance of speed increasing.
@FloJet - I recommend obtaining the Yamaha service manual for your boat from www.yamahapubs.com . It will cost 75 bucks but you will have the full service manual and wiring diagram for your boat. Keep in mind that they don't disclose much about Connext in here. The best way to think about it is that Connext sends and receives all commands including its hard buttons and the joystick in proprietary N2k data to other parts of the boat that interpret the data and then take action on it. For instance pressing cruise up on the joystick sends 00 00 00 00 F1 FF FF FF on PGN 65283 (0x0FF03) for as long as it is depressed and in return the boat responds. Or if you press the hardware bilge button next to the screen connext sends on another hex command on a different PGN which the SPU reads and flips its internal relay/switch for that pin to give the bilge power. With the wiring diagram you will be able to see which items are hooked up to the SPU but the pinout for the connext screen itself maybe disappoining as you will see all of the different canbus connections but there is no info on the canbus beyond that in the manual. As a quick tip I think someone here posted snapshots of the paper tech manual wiring diagrams from a 2015 ar / 242ls which would be the same for a 16 or 17. The e and x series share a different manual and the wiring diagram has many differences.