- Joined
- Jul 18, 2017
- Messages
- 60
- Reaction score
- 22
- Age
- 50
you got lucky that your connections are not loaded with silicone mine had enough to hold the wings on a B17 Bomber no bolts or rivets just silicone lol
That would be awesome if you can come up with that modd and validated and testedlol I am thinking of doing something about the single 18650 battery cell in the controller. I have 8 flight batteries so my RC charge is blinking on the last light by the time I'm done flying for the day. I think this may fit in there https://www.amazon.com/Battery-Pack...04129995&sr=8-12&keywords=li-ion+battery+3.7v if it wont then Il buy two flat packs and solder them together in parallel. If these drones work like some RC stuff I have then the transmission power decreases as battery power is consumed. I plan to buy two more Flight batteries so I'm definitely going to have to do something about the RC Battery drain. I work with li-ion 18650 cells a lot so the one in the RC is probably between 2000 and 2500mAh doubling the mAh will be great
I've had to do it to several RC plane RC's mostly due to weak signal near the end of the batteries cycle definitely going to do it for the Phantom just need to work out how. The pack I linked would be great if it will fit and will be the least amount of work. I'm pulling my RC apart later this evening to measure the space inside. Its not a big deal to solder some flat packs up though if need be.That would be awesome if you can come up with that modd and validated and tested
I Admire you on that , my dream would be to have longer time on my P4 AC to fly further away , i do 12kms ( roundtrip) can do a bit more, but too scared of encountering an issue while flying , i am hoping that some upgrade batt are released for the Phantoms birds .I've had to do it to several RC plane RC's mostly due to weak signal near the end of the batteries cycle definitely going to do it for the Phantom just need to work out how. The pack I linked would be great if it will fit and will be the least amount of work. I'm pulling my RC apart later this evening to measure the space inside. Its not a big deal to solder some flat packs up though if need be.
lol I am thinking of doing something about the single 18650 battery cell in the controller. I have 8 flight batteries so my RC charge is blinking on the last light by the time I'm done flying for the day. I think this may fit in there https://www.amazon.com/Battery-Pack...04129995&sr=8-12&keywords=li-ion+battery+3.7v if it wont then Il buy two flat packs and solder them together in parallel. If these drones work like some RC stuff I have then the transmission power decreases as battery power is consumed. I plan to buy two more Flight batteries so I'm definitely going to have to do something about the RC Battery drain. I work with li-ion 18650 cells a lot so the one in the RC is probably between 2000 and 2500mAh doubling the mAh will be great
good to know I haven't measured the phantom RF output to know for sure, Im an old man so I have a lot of old technology type planes including 27 and 72 MHz AM and FM equipment as well as some 900MHz equipment I built myselfThe assertion that RF power decreases with batt. voltage is just not true with any contemporary radio system. They are typically regulated down to 3.3vdc as voltage sag would create many issues with power drop being the least significant.
Your batt upgrade may provide you otherl benefits, personal and otherwise, but consistent TX power will not be one of them. It simply is a non-issue in this equipment.
I am thinking of doing something about the single 18650 battery cell in the controller. I have 8 flight batteries so my RC charge is blinking on the last light by the time I'm done flying for the day.
unfortunately unless someone opens an RC and measures the value of the resistor and capacitor there is no way to know as those tiny SOT23 size devices don't have values written on them. Maybe someone will do that I would but my Standard drone is lent out ATM for about a month
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.