Soldato
- Joined
- 13 Oct 2006
- Posts
- 8,152
- Location
- Surrey
Yup, the battery slides out.
I got mine yesterday, SO MUCH FUN!
Mine's been despatched

Can anyone recommend a charger that can charge a few of the Hubsan batteries at once?
Yup, the battery slides out.
I got mine yesterday, SO MUCH FUN!
Don't jab them with screwdrivers and you'll be fine
My maiden flight has been delayed. Turns out that while HobbyKing have gone full hog with XT60 connectors on their batteries, they haven't done the same with their accessories. Unpacked my nice shiny charger to discover it has every type of battery connector, except XT60.
Mine's been despatched
Can anyone recommend a charger that can charge a few of the Hubsan batteries at once?
Doh. I've got a handful of XT60 connectors around, what connections does your charger take - wondering if it is 4mm bullets like mine. Might have some bits lying around!
If you let me know before this evening I can probably quickly solder a charge cable together for you and post it to you tomorrow?
Greetings guys, I know there's all the information I'm about to ask is contained within this thread, but there's pages to go through, and I will. But I want to get into multirotors with cameras, I've got a small quad copter that I fly and a honeybee 2 that I'm good at flying, I'm not the greatest pilot but I'm learning![]()
The question is what's the best to start with? I like the idea of being able to view the feed from the camera realtime. I don't mind building something or is a rtf better?
I'm also thinking this could assist me at work, a aerial view of some of our outside events would be fantastic.
Thanks![]()
Killing my old faulty Lipo![]()
Yeah, the 250 range seems to be exploding in popularity, which is likely due to the (relative) cheapness of parts.
Next time, for the sake of humanity, PLEASE film in landscape.
It really depends. Your last point would mean that you'd need to be fully certified and have relevant insurance, its far from a cake walk but doable if you're determined to use UAVs for commercial work.
I am heavily biased by recent experience but I think mini quads are the best thing since sliced ham (bread takes first place obviously). A 250mm sized machine would be capable of carrying normal sized gear for the most part, have great performance and be a blast to fly. Also, hitting the deck with a <500g quad is likely to cost you no more than a prop or two, if you're unlucky![]()
Thanksso what would you advise as a good starting platform? The commercial side would be set aside at the moment.
guys,
I already want something bigger, FPV250 looks quite popular.
Can anyone recommend where I can get a ready to fly package?
Also, can you gps these things?
Thanks
Tony
It really is a good idea to build your own IMO. You'll be thankful when you crash and need to fix it, you'll know how and why everything works together. And it will need fixing, mavity demands it.
If you want instant gratification with bells and whistles like GPS, perhaps look at the DJI Phantom range, but pleeeease don't do anything silly with it!![]()