Hello Charles,

> [ ... ]
> Take your series resistor R2, and put it on the other side of the
> motor. Parallel the resistor with a capacitor determined by
> experimentation.
> The initial starting current will be high enough to start the motor as
> the cap charges. The value of R2 will determine run speed.

Thanks!  I didn't think of that :-)  I'm used to thinking about starter
caps on honkin industrial AC motors :-).  Duhhh, works with DC also :-).
 
> For some reason, I can't acess your site with Opera. I have to fire up
> Internet Explorer.

Booo, Hisss <BLUSH> ... Sorry to force you to resort to that :-(.

Sigh, I don't know why.  Just what are you seeing (or not seeing) ? 
Text problem?  Graphic problem? The only thing I can think of that might
be screwing you up is the <font></font> stuff ?!?

Thanks & take care, Vikki.
--
Victoria Welch, WV9K, DoD#-13, Net/Sys/WebAdmin SeaStar.org,
vikki.oz.net 
#include <coffee.h>
"Walking on water and developing software to specification are
easy as long as both are frozen" - Edward V. Berard.
Do not unto others, that which you would not have others do unto you.


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