1. The Rhino does not use "standard pots" for it's axes. It uses a pot, that is programmable to cont

  1. The Rhino does not use "standard pots" for it's axes. It uses a pot, that is programmable to control gain or other settings. The axes are run directly off the motors, which gives them insane precision, on par with if not beyond a hall sensor. 2. I think the longest term owners are about a year, year and a half in, but these things are built like tanks. 3. the fan is small, so it's whiny more than loud, but I've never even heard mine turn on, you really have to push the unit to make it activate. 4. You should be able to set something like that up with TelemFFB. 5. If you're happy when you get it, you'll be happy down the line, I still own a CM3 which I use for HOSAS, and I would never dream of going back to using the CM3 for my main gimbal. 6. Probably not. These things are already beastly in lighter materials, and quite costly. Making it out of metal would increase weight and cost significantly, while providing no real tangible benefit (outside of all metal style martketing. The parts the count (the motors) are of course made of metal.
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