Phantom Melt Down
The plastic frame of my Phantom keeps developing cracks and eventually breaks where the motors mount. I use thread locker and don't feel like I'm over tightening the screws. Has anyone had the same problem and is there something else I need to do to prevent the broken air frame shell. I'm on the second shell and it's breaking too.
“Thread Locker on Phantoms”
DON’T DO IT! I just became a member today to share my grief. I have been building and playing with multi-rotors for a couple of years now and have had both good and bad experiences relative to tight or loose screws that have taught me to be more diligent and when ever possible to use thread locker. I have been adding a single tiny drop to all screws on all my home builds just in case and then using a torque screw driver so as to not over tighten. I had split the phantom case to perform all of the necessary wiring and modifications for the installation of the Go Pro Zenkuse gamble and mini-OSD. Once it was all done tested and system working perfectly I proceeded to button it up and while doing so I added a tiny drop of thread locker to each screw as I put the machine back together.
Well as you might have already guest, the Phantoms are made out of some cheap soft very thin PVC plastic that DJI uses to attach all of there T-nuts too, one drop and you are toast, every single point where a screw attached to the body or bodies to each other had fallen apart.
How I discovered this horror was while I was doing something else with one of my other units I heard a soft thud to my left and as I turned around I saw my brand new Zenmuse gimble and GoPro lying on the table beneath the phantom and hanging by the ribbon cable. WTF… as I looked closer and as I went to pick up the unit the damn thing fell apart in my hands. Well you can imagine what went through my mind and subsequently out my mouth. If that’s not bad enough, it should be stated that I had with extreme discipline and purpose avoided and not flown the unit even once since I took delivery last Friday awaiting the complete package to take its maiden flight. In fact I had not even powered it up until I was ready for the OSD testing that happened just minutes before this happened.
The only upside to this experience is identifying cracks in the DJI production of the Phantom frame. Don’t be fooled! Now know this, this unit had never been flown by me or anyone else as far as I know, but the solvent and the colorant in the thread locker serves as perfect crack identifier. The viscosity of the solvent is so thin and with a light purple colorant it highlights hundreds of spider cracks in the frame around the screws and around areas where the frame may most likely experience in flight stresses when in use.
Can you imagine its first flight had it not fallen apart in my hands … use your imagination. Picture if you will the rapid disassembly of parts at a few hundred feet up.
I have already come up with a fix, needless to say it requires a little Egyptian Engineering, and of course it involves many Quality ZIP Ties but I believe it more structurally sound then it was new and a hell of a lot better then after the Melt Down.
Fly Safe My Friends