I would try putting some wax on the bottom of the pads or some other chemical to reduce the surface tension
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The manufacturer of the water pods says it's not an issue? Of course they say that, they wouldn't admit to a flaw in the design.Wow, tx so much everyone for the great ideas. Re questions ..Unfortunately no flight log or footage on drone sd card. We're in tropical Brisbane Australia. Yes the camera Lady also saw one pod appear to 'stick' to the water, and surface tension issues were my initial thoughts as well, however the manufacturer says no ? Some lateral movement on takeoff is possible, so if I'm ever brave enough to strap the pods on again, I'll try and avoid that. I was wondering about sticking something like the rough side of Velcro strips on the smooth underside of the pods to see if that reduces any surface tension 'stick'. Would be good to hear from anyone else who has used these themselves ?
Funny, I was thinking the opposite. The surface tension of the water appears to have released on the front pontoons sooner than the back pontoons, so the front took off while the rear was still stuck on the water. I was thinking that lifting off slowly would help release the surface tension more evenly. Once clear of the water, then gas it. I think if the bottom of the pontoon feet were cone shaped this wouldn't happen.IMO you need to be more aggressive on the launch.
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I think if the bottom of the pontoon feet were cone shaped this wouldn't happen.
Drone survived, but I lost a $200 battery, no compensation offered by Drone Raft however :-(I would seriously seek advice about getting them to pay for your drone due to a flawed product
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Looking for help please. My P4 flipped into a lake on it's first water takeoff using the Water Strider'. (See link below). Has anyone seen this before ? Strider was correctly assembled and attached, bird was in P mode, vps off, fps on, and radio has an Itelite extender. Manufacturer can't explain it, so I'm still trying to figure it out. Good news is after a dry out the bird still flys, although the battery didn't make it. All ideas welcome please.
I'm guessing that company doesn't have much money after paying for the tooling to make those floats. I can't believe they're selling very many to make a profit. They definitely have a design that's not optimal. Now it appears they need to redesign. I wonder how much testing they did.
What basis do you have to say that the design is not optimal? I am an engineer and I think its a well made well thought out device.
... I think if the bottom of the pontoon feet were cone shaped this wouldn't happen.
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If its any consolation your video will do significantly more than $200 dollars worth of damage to their business and reputation.Drone survived, but I lost a $200 battery, no compensation offered by Drone Raft however :-(
See my post #24. I suggested a cone design would produce less surface tension upon take-off, wouldn't it? I'm not an engineer, so you tell me. The surface tension of the water potentially the caused the flip.What basis do you have to say that the design is not optimal? I am an engineer and I think its a well made well thought out device.
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