TooManyHobbies
Member
Any Satisfied builds or great RTFs?
_________
Hi guy's.
We recently stumbled upon a great forum and love it (here)!
I just came back into flying multi-rotors and helis this year (2012).
I had a few days of experience in 2005 and also sat looking at a downed .60 size gas Kyosho heli for years.
Life is short, so we would like to start a thread on the stuff that works.
At times, I read the forums until I fall asleep, or watch Youtube videos of Multi-rotors.
Some Youtube users are not on this forum and just use Youtube to record a flight or build.
Ok...
So, after reading in the different manufacturer sections, I noticed that not a whole lot of users are totally satisfied or they are confused with what they have been sold.
By this, I mean that I seem to see that everyone wants more!
Are there any users out here that can testify that a product they bought or kit actually a good build for the average flyer?
I can see spending a good $750-$1500 on the machine and another $500-800 on transmitter, FPV, OSD etc.
My first week I almost bought a GAUI 500x RTF, found this forum, and stopped in my tracks.
The main point I am trying to make is that we want to fly a lot!
My nephew looks at me, saying is there anything that works the way they thought it would?
Why do they need so many aftermarket things?
Now the parts won't sync well with that controller.
He just lost his flight times to under 10 minutes.
His FPV camera weight just sucked the capabilities out of that nice build.
Look at that video jello!
OMG, he paid $$$, and his FPV (first person camera view) goes out of range!
Awe no, his new motors just are overpowering his factory frame!
These are the comments/questions I hear, and it's depressing.
I hope I don't sound like a jerk, but we are new to this again and it is overwhelming.
Is it time for a custom RTF build, just to get to a better flying machine without all the headaches?
Can you super duper nice people persons show us your satisfied build?
-Name the whole build or show it off in a video.
-We'd love to get a feel for what is working for people "in numbers".
_________
Hi guy's.
We recently stumbled upon a great forum and love it (here)!
I just came back into flying multi-rotors and helis this year (2012).
I had a few days of experience in 2005 and also sat looking at a downed .60 size gas Kyosho heli for years.
Life is short, so we would like to start a thread on the stuff that works.
At times, I read the forums until I fall asleep, or watch Youtube videos of Multi-rotors.
Some Youtube users are not on this forum and just use Youtube to record a flight or build.
Ok...
So, after reading in the different manufacturer sections, I noticed that not a whole lot of users are totally satisfied or they are confused with what they have been sold.
By this, I mean that I seem to see that everyone wants more!
Are there any users out here that can testify that a product they bought or kit actually a good build for the average flyer?
I can see spending a good $750-$1500 on the machine and another $500-800 on transmitter, FPV, OSD etc.
My first week I almost bought a GAUI 500x RTF, found this forum, and stopped in my tracks.
The main point I am trying to make is that we want to fly a lot!
My nephew looks at me, saying is there anything that works the way they thought it would?
Why do they need so many aftermarket things?
Now the parts won't sync well with that controller.
He just lost his flight times to under 10 minutes.
His FPV camera weight just sucked the capabilities out of that nice build.
Look at that video jello!
OMG, he paid $$$, and his FPV (first person camera view) goes out of range!
Awe no, his new motors just are overpowering his factory frame!
These are the comments/questions I hear, and it's depressing.
I hope I don't sound like a jerk, but we are new to this again and it is overwhelming.
Is it time for a custom RTF build, just to get to a better flying machine without all the headaches?
Can you super duper nice people persons show us your satisfied build?
-Name the whole build or show it off in a video.
-We'd love to get a feel for what is working for people "in numbers".
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