Two clients want me to fly their RED EPIC cameras - advice?




BorisS

Drone Enthusiast


Test fly with the intended weight and check the temps on everything. Have them get an insurance cover note for the day of the shoot. If **** happens keep your cool and land. Rinse and repeat.

As for the motors. All vendors selling Tiger motors are selling the same stuff. Plain old Tiger motors. The just sell them at 3x the price because the motors are prone for failure and they need their profit margin.

If you are going to spend more than 80 euro on a motor I find it extremely foolish to get anything else but AXI motors.
 


PaNt

Member
tiger/QC/avrotos only take 4s. And the AXI's are definitely not made by tiger! They are in a league of their own.

The take 5s with EAsy after a lot of tests..! And if you send an email to rctiger they will tell you that 5s is no problem..1 DOnt stay at the specs only..!
 

ChrisViperM

Active Member
I did a fair amount of testing with a CS8 reaching AUW of 17.6lbs on 4S. Using two TP 6600mAh 45C packs gave flight times of 7:30 on average until 14V/10,500mAh consumed. The machine with batts installed ready to fly was 10.1lbs and the load was 7.5lbs in the form of a chunk of stainless steel. I did six flights before I melted the 45A PowerPole connectors on the summed side of the parallel harness. Between the corroded contacts from the connection sparks and 85A average draws in a hover and 150A draws on climb outs it smoked those suckers. So be certain to use high capacity connectors like the EC5 or PRC6. The CS8 can fly a properly prepared Epic with a compact prime but it doesn't have much reserve or room for error. Tabb and David and working hard on creating a nice, optimized heavy lift rig for that kind of stuff.

My camera operator has a FS700 on order as well. I haven't been able to find a full spec sheet listing its weight. A bare 100 is 2.3lbs so I'm hoping the 700 stays under 3lbs for the body. If it ends up being able to record 4k to that light weight Sony SSD side pack it could be a killer camera for aerials.

You are absolutely right with the connectors....flying around with equipment for thousands of $$ and not taking care for a proper electrical connection is not very clever. I am also only using EC5's and I am more than happy with them. To avoid "sparking" when connecting the LiPo's there are two ways:

The cheap one:
http://www.electricwingman.com/jeti-anti-spark-connectors-4mm.aspx
http://www.helifreak.com/showthread.php?t=163734
http://www.4-max.co.uk/grafix/AntiSpark1.JPG
http://www.4-max.co.uk/grafix/AntiSpark2.JPG

The more expensive way:
http://shop.rc-electronic.com/e-ven...&a=article&ProdNr=A72000&t=2263&c=2263&p=2263
The good thing about it is, you connect the LiPo's without sparking and you arm or disarm the whole system with a magnetic plug/switch. It's just 45 g in weight and is worth every cent....normally it is used in RC planes and helicopters.

Chris
 

Bartman

Welcome to MultiRotorForums.com!!
how about this? if you have dual batteries, put a switch on one of the positive leads. connect the battery, flip the switch on, then connect the other non-switched battery to its lead which won't spark because power is already on.

you could also put a small 4S (or whatever you're using) in place with a switch to power up the board and then connect your two batteries once power has been supplied. switch off the small battery before flight and it will last almost forever.

just a couple of quick thoughts that came to mind while reading.
 

vislaw

Member
... To avoid "sparking" when connecting the LiPo's there are two ways:

The cheap one:
http://www.electricwingman.com/jeti-anti-spark-connectors-4mm.aspx
http://www.helifreak.com/showthread.php?t=163734
http://www.4-max.co.uk/grafix/AntiSpark1.JPG
http://www.4-max.co.uk/grafix/AntiSpark2.JPG

The more expensive way:
http://shop.rc-electronic.com/e-ven...&a=article&ProdNr=A72000&t=2263&c=2263&p=2263
The good thing about it is, you connect the LiPo's without sparking and you arm or disarm the whole system with a magnetic plug/switch. It's just 45 g in weight and is worth every cent....normally it is used in RC planes and helicopters.

Chris

I really appareciated this information. When I first started flying MRs I bought some cheap arming switches without fully understanding the amount of current we are dealing with. Learned my lesson when the switch fried and failed in mid-flight. I just ordered the SPS SafetySwitch and am glad to have read your post.
 

Castle recommends not using a spark protector on their esc's. A nice spark show that your capacitors are doing their job, plus the switch is another thing to go wrong in the chain.
 

DucktileMedia

Drone Enthusiast
I wondered if that would work as well. Connect a small 2s battery to the esc's first. I know the maytech escs held a charge for a few minutes. not sure if they all do it.
 

After some testing, it looks as though we'll need to upgrade the motors - they get a bit too hot in this 100 degree weather. We could do it with the current setup, but it would be pushing the rig harder than I'd like.
 

tstrike

pendejo grande
Hi Benjamin, just curious what format your clients planning for release that they would want to fly the red? Have you had a look at the canon c300? Half the weight of the epic and the image is freeeeekin gorgeous! We're on stage shooting with Miss Alexa this week, now there's a camera built by filmmakers. Our lighting is knocked down so much that to your eye it looks like we have no lights on at all, but you look at the monitors and it looks like we're blasting 9 lites through the windows.
Enjoy your videos very much.
tom
 

jrlederer

Member
re: the SPS solutions touched on earlier in this thread

what's the final word of advice regarding whether its a great idea worth the relatively big bucks for a robust XL model, or a complete waste of money as implied by Castle mentioning that the spark is our friend?
 


ChrisViperM

Active Member
Castle recommends not using a spark protector on their esc's. A nice spark show that your capacitors are doing their job, plus the switch is another thing to go wrong in the chain.

With that kind of value (camera + copter) involved, nobody right in his mind would use a castle BEC. Search the net and you will know what I mean. The only BEC I trust is the Herkules :

http://helidirect.com/advanced_search_result.php?keywords=Hercules&x=12&y=18

After 20 years beeing in RC helis, cars, airplanes...I have tried just about anything avalible, and the combination Hercules BEC + Emcotec SPS Safety Power Switch is the ONLY combination which never failed in all those years.
Neither is it very clever to have a fat spark next to your camera and your copter electronics nor does it any good to your connectors. Every time you produce a spark, your connectors get corroded a little bit...so you never know when you see the last spark in the life of your equipment.
Btw...the Emcotec doesn't have a mechanical switch - which could fail - , it's operated with a magnetic switch.

I don't want to start any off-topic duscussion here, but it's always amazing to see how much value is sent into air without taking care of even the most basic precautions concerning "remote control" and electrics....

Best regards

Chris
 

This is an interesting debate about the switch vs. no switch. I'll need to look into this more.

The clients want to shoot with the Red Epic because that is what they use for their productions. They want to stick to the workflow they are use to and they want the cameras to match. Can't blame them. I'd want the same thing.

The C300 puts out some pretty images, but I'd have to rent one, and it doesn't have the same resolution. Alexa is awesome - maybe one day they'll make a lightweight version.

I'll let you guys know how things pan out. I'd say bigger motors are in my future.
 

ChrisViperM

Active Member
This is an interesting debate about the switch vs. no switch. I'll need to look into this more.

The clients want to shoot with the Red Epic because that is what they use for their productions. They want to stick to the workflow they are use to and they want the cameras to match. Can't blame them. I'd want the same thing.

The C300 puts out some pretty images, but I'd have to rent one, and it doesn't have the same resolution. Alexa is awesome - maybe one day they'll make a lightweight version.

I'll let you guys know how things pan out. I'd say bigger motors are in my future.

If you go for bigger motors, just make sure you get the matching ESP's (speed controllers). The best bet is to have ESC's operate at about 70% ~ 80% of their capacity...if they are too big and you use only, let's say 40%, they get very hot...if they are too small, and operate on their limit, you have no reserves....and give them as much air as possible for cooling.

It's all about efficency between propellers, ESC's and motors...and it's always a pain in the a** to find the sweet spot.

Chris
 

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