Thanks for all the informative responses guys. Just to clarify. I’m aware just how much of a marvel these little servos are. There is alot of power packed into a tiny package.
I also realize that servos can’t be operated at stall continuously. And that they will never actually produce their stall torque for more than a few seconds before burning out. What I think, is that servo manufacturers should be displaying their specs the same way Lipo batteries do. With a continuous and a burst rating. A 300oz stall servo should probably be called a 200oz continuous or 300oz burst. Since that is the reality. To assume that people will only be using their servos for short bursts is not realistic. Hitec posts their specs in such a way for the purpose of putting the highest numbers they can out, then adding some fine print somewhere saying “posted torque at 7 volts for 2 seconds on the surface of mars”.
I was running my 5995 on an SES style arm, with 5 inch long segments and a 5 oz motor on the end of the hand. The servo was in the elbow joint, no restricted movement and very little load. I was running through some very basic movements in RIOS for about 4 to 5 minutes. Then poof, up in smoke. I’m using just 1 HSR-5995 on the base of the arm, it was barely warm. And at 6.0 Volts!! The last one was at 7.2 Volts and burned up about 30 seconds into some load tests where it was near stall, not stalled.
I’ve used and abused HS-645’s and 805’s where they are repeatedly being stalled for extended periods and never had one fail. So why is it that me, and others, keep smoking the 5995 when it is pushed as being so powerful and wonderful. Especially when the price reflects that.
I can’t help but feel like there is nothing special about this servo at all. They tossed titanium gears and a metal arm onto a servo and said “the super robot servo, 417oz of torque!!! Wow, come buy one” When really they could have just said “run your HS-5645 at 7.2 Volts and you get loads more torque…[size=75]for 10 to 15 seconds[/size].”
If the chips and motor can’t handle a moderate load current for more than a couple minutes or a stall current for a few seconds, then they are pretty useless. I mean thanks for the heatsink and the thermal shutoff on the HS-5990 but I think you can keep it. Especially if it’s the same servos with a shutdown and heatsink added. So I should buy some so that instead of smoking the servos, they just constantly shut down from overheating. That’s alot less frustrating. 
I love Hitec servos. But come on. The HS-5995’'s are a joke. They labeled them something they are not to set the bar in the market for a powerful servo. When really all they had was a moderate servo that they recommended everyone overvolted. I have notice some vendors don’t even post the higher torque spec at 7+ volts. Some advertise them as a 333oz/in servo at 6.0V. Which is what they are. Almost.
And this is not an attack on you Jim. You always put the customer first and I love that. It’s not like you made the servos. You have to sell whatever they offer. We are all at the mercy of that. I just wish Hitec would realize that I would pay $200 for a servo that could do 333oz/in indefinitely and reliably, as apposed to a 417oz/in servo that only works for 30 seconds then commits suicide.