I've had quite a few flights now and a couple of mishaps and i am very impressed at how durable this thing is so what's on next years plate for a group build
It's been a while since we started this thread and in the time since some stuff has changed, other things not so much.
Flight control systems have made it a lot easier to be able to consider different options.
You could be right about the DJI ESCs. I tried using them with a NAZE32 and couldn't get the motors to come up to speed correctly. Finally gave up. If there's a solution for this I'd be interested in hearing it. Was using DJI motors as well and Cleanflight. As Bart noted you will need a 5 v BEC for power.I built my F550 with a PixHawk clone - the RTFHawk and have been very happy with it. It did not work well with DJI ESCs, however. Now I am building a 250 racing quad with a Naze32 board and plan on using my DJI ESCs with it. I seem to remember that the endpoints on the DJIs are fixed and different than other ESCs. 1100 and 1700, maybe? I can't remember. Does anyone happen to know what they are? Or am I confusing it altogether?
Also, I have some 5 volt, 2 amp fixed voltage regulators laying around. Can I use one of these as a BEC to power the flight controller and receiver?
Thanks
You could be right about the DJI ESCs. I tried using them with a NAZE32 and couldn't get the motors to come up to speed correctly. Finally gave up. If there's a solution for this I'd be interested in hearing it. Was using DJI motors as well and Cleanflight.
Exactly the performance I had . I was using E300 motors on a F450 frame. Switched to an old NazaM V1 (flashed to a V2) and all worked fine.That may be why it is said Naze32 is not for DJI frames. IIRC, the lower half of the throttle would work okay, then little or no difference in motor speed between half and full throttle and there was a LONG delay for the motor speed to decline when the throttle was cut. I was/am using DJI E300 motors on my F550. It is overweight/underpowered, but not fatally so.
I'll give the DJI ESCs a try. It won't cost me a cent to try. I'll report my results back here ASAP. I have all of the parts ordered, don't have any yet.
Exactly the performance I had . I was using E300 motors on a F450 frame. Switched to an old NazaM V1 (flashed to a V2) and all worked fine.
probably a good idea. Turnigy Plush are a good all-purpose ESC that don't cost much. For high pole-count motors (Pancake style as they say), Hobbywing PRO are not expensive and work great. There are a lot of other options if you want to do the leg work of checking them all out. I've never bought into the whole SimonK thing although the OneShot ESC feature seems very cool in that the braking is used to decelerate the motors when reducing power instead of just letting the props freewheel and decelerate from the drag on the propsI may as well order some ESCs then, and not even mess with these. :-(
Thanks
Hi everyone,
I'd like to propose a group build. We'll start with the process of selecting components, we'll purchase what we need, and then go step by step through the assembly and flight testing. To the maximum extent possible we'll stick with one list of pieces but there will also be room for people to customize things.
As it is intended to be a learning process we'll pick components typical for a light lift quad or hex and the proceed to add what would be useful for sport flying, FPV, or aerial photo/video use.
Right off the bat I'd steer us towards a DJI F450 or F550 frame set, Tiger 2216 motors, 10" props, Turnigy Plush 30A ESC's and either the DJI NAZA or XAircraft Super X flight control systems. There's an inexpensive brushless GoPro gimbal we can adapt to the frame and with a landing gear solution you'll be good to go. A simple GoPro mount would be better for FPV and there wouldn't be any camera for just flying around the local park or RC field.
Anyone interested in something like this? I was going to help a fellow member to get started and just thought maybe we could have some fun with it here. Winter's coming (for us N. Hemisphererers) so it's a good time to kick off a new build project.
Who's in?
EDIT:
We've gone ahead and started the group build. From that I've added a list of abbreviations for multi-rotor helicopters and their associated equipment/hardware/manufacturers/etc.;
http://www.multirotorforums.com/sho...Heli-abbreviations-acronyms-secret-codes-etc-!
There is also a tutorial on Lithium Polymer batteries;
http://www.multirotorforums.com/showthread.php?12819-Understanding-Lithium-Polymer-batteries
Some points about hardware selection;
http://www.multirotorforums.com/sho...50-Quadcopter!&p=139675&viewfull=1#post139675
Outline of initial set-up using NAZA-M Assistant
http://www.multirotorforums.com/sho...AZA-M-V2-w-GPS&p=149450&viewfull=1#post149450
About first flights;
http://www.multirotorforums.com/sho...50-Quadcopter!&p=141416&viewfull=1#post141416
NAZA Quick Start Guide Review
http://www.multirotorforums.com/sho...50-Quadcopter!&p=142412&viewfull=1#post142412
Here are the videos that are posted in the thread covering different aspects of the build process
DJI NAZA intro video
Another DJI demo video
Here's a list of common mistakes that keep new NAZA builds from flying properly;
- Front of NAZA IMU is pointing towards the back of the helicopter (motor wires should be plugged into the FRONT of the NAZA)
- NAZA needs to be mounted upright (upside down is baaaaddddd, you didn't do that, right?)
- NAZA components are not plugged into each other correctly
- Controls calibration not completed successfully (Use NAZA Assistant to check this)
- Controls are reversed (Use NAZA Assistant to check them)
- ESC's have not been calibrated (DJI 30A Opto ESC's do not need to be calibrated)
- One or more motor directions are reversed (switch any two of the three motor-to-ESC connections to reverse the direction of the motor)
- One or more motors are plugged into the wrong slots of the NAZA
- One or more propellers are on the wrong motors or upside down
- Radio transmitter is set to Heli instead of Acro
- One or more receiver channels are plugged into the wrong input ports of the NAZA
- Old channel mixes in your transmitter are messing things up
- Flight battery is dead or close to dead
what exactly are the specs of the motors? manufacturer and model # would help alsoHi and thanks for your reply!
I have it off, I already ruled that out as a possible cause.
I did notice many builds suggest motors with less electric draw, like 770KV, could my 1000 KV motors be the culprit?
what exactly are the specs of the motors? manufacturer and model # would help also
The all DJI kit with NAZA M V2 would be a good way to start building. I did one of those during the group build and it was easy to build and flys well. I originally used a JR transmitter and receiver but have since switched to Taranis stuff. I have since built another quad using a DJI 450 frame and motors but used a Pixhawk FC. The Pixhawk (would have to be one of its clones nowdays) is more complicated to set up but does more things than the M V2.Hey all! Newbie here looking to do a F450 build. If you were redoing this build right now, what would the component list look like? I have no real method of deciding which newer bits to swap out, but hoping to follow this thread's instructions pretty closely. I've seen a kit with the naza m v2 straight from dji. Suggestions? I need basically everything.
Bob