Nocteel
Member
So here's the long story condensed down as much as I can. I have just built my first multirotor and have been grounded due to motor failures more than I've been flying so far. First I suppose should be my specs:
Flame Wheel F450
DJI 30A ESCs
NAZA + GPS
DJI 2212-920 and Twister T450-880
There are two motors listed because that's what I've had on it so far.
I bought most of the parts as a kit from Atlanta Hobby after spending a month or so trying to learn as much as I can. At the time they where offering a ARF kit with the Twister motors instead of the stock DJI. Since these where a bit more torquey and not that much more as far as the cost of the kit. I went for it knowing that I would eventually be putting a GoPro on it. Shortly after I finished the build and before I really had it off the ground (just testing motor direction and hovering for programming testing) I noticed one of the motors making an odd sound. After a quick inspection I found one of the motors had started to separate and the barrings where grinding. (By separating I mean the bell had slid up the shaft and lifted off the base.) I contacted Atlanta Hobby and they immediately shipped me 2 replacement motors (not sure if that was intentional or not). I replaced the bad motor and after one flight found the replacement was also bad but this time the bell was actually directly binding on the base. So after replacing the replacement I was able to fly for about 10 or so flights before I had a catastrophic failure of the replacement replacement motor. From about 30 ft up one arm dropped which threw it into a nasty spiral and into the pavement. After a few four letter words I checked over the wreckage and noticed that in addition to the fully bound motor 3 of the others where just starting to bind as well. Same as the first replacement where the bell was touching the base. Again I contacted Atlanta Hobby and simply asked what I was doing wrong and they responded by not only sending 4 DJI motors and a replacement arm for the one that broke but told me that they where looking into the MFG for what was going wrong. I was told in a later email that there had been a MFG defect with that batch of Twister motors causing the binding and that I should just keep using the DJI motors till they sorted it out and ship me four new Twisters. This leads me to two days ago when I'm flying and again loose control. This time from closer to 80 ft up. Having more stick time under my hat this time I'm able to at least direct it away from the ocean where it had started heading and land it in a empty lot. (Ok so the "landing" was pure luck since I was aiming for the road where I might have been able to find it. I was only about a 100 yards off.) Again the survey of the crash finds a failing motor but this time it's on the DJI and looks more like the very first failure where the bell is pulling away from the base and the bearings are grinding. The way I understand it this is not the same issue that caused the original recall and since it has happened twice now on two different brands I'm wondering if it's me or my build.
So after all that my questions are this: My 4 new motors should be here in a few days. How do I keep them in the air? Is it something I'm doing or is it just pure bad luck that I keep having these things happen.
There are a few other details but this post is already too long so I'll leave it here and/or add on later if needed.
I'll be thankful for any help I can get. With this much money hovering over my head I'd like it to stay there.
Flame Wheel F450
DJI 30A ESCs
NAZA + GPS
DJI 2212-920 and Twister T450-880
There are two motors listed because that's what I've had on it so far.
I bought most of the parts as a kit from Atlanta Hobby after spending a month or so trying to learn as much as I can. At the time they where offering a ARF kit with the Twister motors instead of the stock DJI. Since these where a bit more torquey and not that much more as far as the cost of the kit. I went for it knowing that I would eventually be putting a GoPro on it. Shortly after I finished the build and before I really had it off the ground (just testing motor direction and hovering for programming testing) I noticed one of the motors making an odd sound. After a quick inspection I found one of the motors had started to separate and the barrings where grinding. (By separating I mean the bell had slid up the shaft and lifted off the base.) I contacted Atlanta Hobby and they immediately shipped me 2 replacement motors (not sure if that was intentional or not). I replaced the bad motor and after one flight found the replacement was also bad but this time the bell was actually directly binding on the base. So after replacing the replacement I was able to fly for about 10 or so flights before I had a catastrophic failure of the replacement replacement motor. From about 30 ft up one arm dropped which threw it into a nasty spiral and into the pavement. After a few four letter words I checked over the wreckage and noticed that in addition to the fully bound motor 3 of the others where just starting to bind as well. Same as the first replacement where the bell was touching the base. Again I contacted Atlanta Hobby and simply asked what I was doing wrong and they responded by not only sending 4 DJI motors and a replacement arm for the one that broke but told me that they where looking into the MFG for what was going wrong. I was told in a later email that there had been a MFG defect with that batch of Twister motors causing the binding and that I should just keep using the DJI motors till they sorted it out and ship me four new Twisters. This leads me to two days ago when I'm flying and again loose control. This time from closer to 80 ft up. Having more stick time under my hat this time I'm able to at least direct it away from the ocean where it had started heading and land it in a empty lot. (Ok so the "landing" was pure luck since I was aiming for the road where I might have been able to find it. I was only about a 100 yards off.) Again the survey of the crash finds a failing motor but this time it's on the DJI and looks more like the very first failure where the bell is pulling away from the base and the bearings are grinding. The way I understand it this is not the same issue that caused the original recall and since it has happened twice now on two different brands I'm wondering if it's me or my build.
So after all that my questions are this: My 4 new motors should be here in a few days. How do I keep them in the air? Is it something I'm doing or is it just pure bad luck that I keep having these things happen.
There are a few other details but this post is already too long so I'll leave it here and/or add on later if needed.
I'll be thankful for any help I can get. With this much money hovering over my head I'd like it to stay there.