quickly said, I have been looking with a lot of envy to different emerging tri and quadrocopter projects, and ArduCopter really looks like a very complete and evolutive platform. Not being a hard "DIY" kind of profile, I also find complete kits like the ArduCopter Quad "full kit" (presoldered, etc) is really a big plus.
I'm just wondering - having no past history in modelism, having only flown "toys" heli such as the Blade mSR or a Robbe BlueArrow XL (a coax heli), is flying an ArduCopter Quad something in reach to me, or should I best first spent time (months) learning to fly a CCPM heli before ?
I had the feeling reading different articles that the ArduCopter would not be too difficult to fly for someone with a bit of coax experience.
My intend is really to have it as a R/C hobby, flying it around in the area, then attaching a small camera and taking aerial pictures or movies, then potentially move on to FPV and totally automated flights (GPS waypoints, etc).
Thanks in advance for your comments.
Replies
I was (and basically I still am) a total newbie. Never, ever have flown anything other than a kyte when I was young.
I first bought a GAUI attracted by the price, and the fact that there is a huge community behind.
Meanwhile I started buying ArduCopter electronics as a medium term project.
Conclusion: GAUI frame is great, I carshed every single flying session, with a little of CA glue (when necessary) copter was back in the air. But I was never able to "Fly it", just trying to hover it....
Then my AC was ready and I put the brain on the GAUI frame and... it was flying! Hovering, going up and down doing 8 figures and whatever. Only crashes were because of my newbie errors: battery low, bad connections, trees ect.
The main difference of the ArduCopter compared to GAUI is that when you leave your sticks (and you have a well trimmed copter) everything gets to stall (thanks to accelerometers). While with GAUI you always need to counter correct every move.
Probably I will never get to be a good pilot, but believe me: I am having so much fun now!!
Plus you get GPS, Barometer, Sonar, Magnetomenter and so on!
P.S.
For the extra features working, have a peek into this blog: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1286011 worth having a go until the official group releases their code!
Happy flying!
Emile
Regards,
Rich
If you have any electronics or robotics background, programming knowledge, are a logical thinker or can follow instructions you'll be fine and I highly recommend ArduCopter. The thing about Arducopter is that you will definitely need to be able to think for yourself (be a real problem solver) if you want to dive in right now. The project is moving ahead in leaps and bounds, and may one day be a plug-and-play toy. But as the theme goes, it is DIY. Concluding, have confidence in yourselves and give it a shot! If you're willing to learn and experiment safely, you're good to go.
As far as learning to fly a heli first, if you're good on your mSr orientation-wise, you have what it takes. Heck, you can even practice driving an RC car toward you if you feel like you need some experience. :)
Anyone could kindly advise whether AurduCopter Quad Full Kit Presoldered would be a good start for a quad newbie, or if I should head first for quads such as the Gaui 330X-S in a first step ?
Thanks in advance