Ordering a Arducopter Hexa

Hi All,

 

I'm a newbie that has been following DiyDrones website for a while. Now that the Hexa kit is available I have decided to take the plunge and build one. I'm in the process of ordering the Arducopter Hexa kit from the JDrones stores and was wondering if there is anything else worth including in the order (shipping is pricy!) So far, this is what I have on the list:

 

ArduCopter Hexa KIT v1.0, Full Electronics - Getting the 30A ESC and bigger motors. What arms are standard with this kit? Can I specify T1 or T2 etc etc?

XL-MaxSonar-EZ0

Maxbotix Sonar mount for ArduCopter, v1.0, XL-Sonar Mount

Sonar cable, 3 pin, 24cm

Propeller set, 12x45 EPP Style, Composite For the inevitable crashes!


Is there anything else worth including that will be usefull and or necessary?

 

Any advice appreciated.

 

Regards,

Paul

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Replies

  • Hey all,

     

    Thanks for all the advice!  Fear not, I can assure you part of the reason I'm doing this is for the challenge of putting it all together. I will enjoy the challenge and all the problem solving! Must be my inner geek/engineer.

     

    I will add the following to the JDrones order:

    • Motor Mounts x 2
    • Spare Motors x 2
    • Spare Propellers x 2 sets
    • Spare ESC's x 2
    • Spare arms x 2

    I will get the following separately from other shops:

    • xt60 connectors (Hobbyking)
    • Prop Balancer (Hobbyking)
    • Batteries and Charger (Hobbyking)
    • Shrinkwrap (locally)
    • Prop balancer (will trawl the net a bit more)
    • Transmitter (locally - brand shall remain nameless to avoid a flame war)

    I already have:

    • Soldering Iron (Temp controlled)
    • Wire strippers
    • Pliers
    • USB to MiniUSB cable
    • Zip ties

    I'll consider the following at some point in the future (when the budget allows!) :

    • XBee Telemetry
    • AttoPilot Current Sensor

    Ultimately I'd like to progress to taking landscape/aerial photos using the Hexa (hobby - not professional). I'll investigate FPV and telemetry once I have finished the initial build and am comfortable flying.

     

    A few other questions:

    • Does anybody know what arms the standard Hexa kit comes with? T1, T2 or T3?
    • Is there a simple low battery warning sensor/device available?

     

    Regards,

    Paul

     

     

     

  • Distributor

    guys, you will scare Paul with all this...  :) 

     

    Paul, they are all right! I am sorry but you will need parts and tools! :)  

    If you go with 30A ESC I would recommend to order a few spare of these just in case... the quality improved at the factory but in my first order of these back in April I got 2 defective ones that only show sings of erratic behavior when they became hot after minutes of flying... so like the other guys said you will crash, you will bend arms, break motor mount, lose screws, nuts but you will ENJOY every moments! 

     

     

  • Moderator

    I don't have much experience, so take this with very little weight, and I have only ever flown home-made frames and the 850Kv motors, so take that into account also.

     

    I recommend (specific products are my own preference, the general idea is the key)

    a good soldering iron (I have had create success by going overboard with the X-Tronic 4000 series rework station, think I got mine from Amazon. I wanted a weller, but rumors were some of the new weller are not the same quality. I have been very pleased w/ the X-Tronic so far, and the heat wand has saved my butt three times, besides being outstanding for shrink-wrap)

    at least one spare ESC and motor, - I have never burned an ESC or motor, but I have read many other people to whom this has happened. And both items can be on backorder for weeks...

    at least two sets of propellers (it is easy on a hexa to lost two "R" props, and be out in the field looking at your single "R" and normal CCW spare in despair)

    zip ties - I absolutely *love* zip ties - you may not need them with a kit frame but I use them like I test, every moment and everywhere

    batteries and a good charger. I use 3 cell 4400 FlightMax 15C or 3 cell 2200 30c, but use your own math for your frame & weight. I did some calculations on a frame of my own configured as a quad with 880Kv and saw promising results with the 5800mHA, but I don't know your weight. Also, I avoided the 5800 in the end because my charger of choise, the IMAX B6, docs suggested keeping the Amps under 5 ... so I have never bought larger than the 4400s. Be sure to check the IMAX (if you get it) for a power supply. There is an AC version, but most people seem to get the 12v and get a separate power brick (as did I)

    appropriate connectors for esc, motors, batteries (this is a complex topic; a lot of experienced operators here eliminate the connectors entirely between motor and ESC, as it is a leading cause of failures. I haven't had one, and do a lot of prototyping, so I keep them in ... for now. I use 3.5mm barrel connectors between the motors and ESCs, I use Deans on ESC to PDB, but I use XT60 for battery to PDB (and for my Ham radio variable voltage power supply, which I use for tethered non-flight power) but I use a short cable to convert from the Deans input to the battery XT60... this way I can add the deans/deans AttoPilot current sensor between my cable and the PDB. You may not need any of that complexity, my own results in a combination of "reusable" parts in the rest of my fleet, aggravation with incompatibilities between genuine and after market/knock off dean connectors, weight, and frequency of connect/disconnect, plus some considerations for amperage for certain components that I test at levels beyond that needed for these motors/ESCs.

     

    personnally I could not live without telemetry - I use the xbee kit. It may be pricy, but with what I am doing, I could not live without a good data feed.

     

    I also recommend some good kite string or similar (for tethering; and zip ties make nice and quick harnesses and cable guides to hang in your garage or under a deck,)

    a decent 6 or more channel TX/RX pair is helpful. Well, essentially, really, if you don't have one. transmitters are something like religion, I'll avoid mentioning any specifics here so as not to offend anyone :)

     

    Besides the soldering iron, I also (and you may not need) have a good pair of wire strippers, dikes, and needle nose pliers. To that, I added the deluxe servo cable kit from Hanson Hobbies (recommended by HappyKillmore - and I love it) With your kit, you may not need it, but I use it daily for custom cables of all kinds, for programming components, fixing bad/lose connections, etc. I also use a good multimeter, again, optional, but I could not live without it. 

    Shrink wrap - in three different colors - if you like that sort of thing. White, black (mostly black), yellow and red.

     

    There are a few dozen other things I use, most of which are specific to tasks other than flying a hexa (FPV, special projects related indirectly to the basic aircraft

     

    You really can get in deep with the bits and bobbles. I've been doing this for less than 60 days ;) And the inventory of stuff I have is at least five times as long as the stuff I have mentioned.... 

     

    Happy hacking.

     

     

  • get some spare parts ! :)

     

    one or two crash kits, 2-3 motor mounts, spare motors, a few pairs of propellers  .. and don't jump on highraise landing gear from start (well you can buy them and use them later) but be sure to get the classic small ones .. itll help a lot more for your maiden flight .

     

    This is what i learned since last saturday .. 20 minutes of flight hehe ^^

     

    Oh if you plan buying lipos at hobbyking, buy some xt60 connectors pairs to equip your lipos with them, so you can easily power your copter and also connect safely to your charger with a simple adaptor cable .. a cable you'll be able to make yourself or buy easily in the nearest shop. (xt60 doesnt seem to be easily available all over europe at least)

     

    Also, buy minimal soldering equipment, its mandatory .. you will have to solder one or two things if you wanna get going faster (not being dependent on an online shop or a repair buddy)

     

    Get also a usb to miniusb (not microusb!) cable so you can program your copter .. what else .. mmm thats it for now ^^

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