stangflyer
I like 'em "BIG"!
Sorry, but I am going to stick my neck in a noose here. I have to agree with @Forgues-Research on this. At first glance, one would think..."Hey, that is kind of cool"! "They appear to be a very well built servo"! However upon closer inspection, they absolutely "DO" depict "Ghost Screws". What's the meaning of this? I will give you an example. The Hitec HS7980TH and the HS 7990TH, (And many other Hitec servos) definitely have the same type of placement of two screws in the top of the case. With the remaining four coming up from the bottom circuit board cover plate. Six in all holding the cases together. I "KNOW" for a fact, these screws are most certainly "NOT" ghost screws. I myself would question the integrity of the servo as well as the manufacturer. Is it some ploy to imply or suggest the servo is much more elaborate and quality built than it really is? Maybe it is a moot point. However when we are talking "big" output torque servos, they need to be robust to handle the strains and forces we put on them. In my opinion, four screws "tying" that much torque together is just not enough. On an 80 or 90 oz servo? Ok, I will go with that. Maybe even a 133 ouncer. But come on, over 400 oz's is a bunch of grunt to rely on just four screws.As I am reading , the servos do look good but because one part of the information absolutely not true, then I wonder how many others are not true, please have a look on the assembled servo picture , it shows 6 cover screws , which is great but look at the other picture , the screws go nowhere, they are fake screws to give you the impression they are very stiff
For reference:
HS 7980TH (611 oz @ 7.4VDC) 6 screws
HS 7990TH Magnetic Encoder (611 oz. @ 7.4VDC) 6 screws
HS 7650TH (486 oz @ 7.4VDC) 6 screws
D645MW (180 oz @ 7.4VDC) 4 screws (This being one of Hitecs newest addition to their servo line. 32 bit programming with soft start)