#3,711 in Toys & Games

Reddit mentions of Makerfire 4pcs 7x16mm 17600KV Brushed Motors 0.8mm Shaft with Micro JST 1.25 2P Connector CW CCW 716 Coreless Motors for Tiny 6X Beta65S Eachine E011 Tiny Whoop Micro FPV Drone

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Makerfire 4pcs 7x16mm 17600KV Brushed Motors 0.8mm Shaft with Micro JST 1.25 2P Connector CW CCW 716 Coreless Motors for Tiny 6X Beta65S Eachine E011 Tiny Whoop Micro FPV Drone. Here are the top ones.

Makerfire 4pcs 7x16mm 17600KV Brushed Motors 0.8mm Shaft with Micro JST 1.25 2P Connector CW CCW 716 Coreless Motors for Tiny 6X Beta65S Eachine E011 Tiny Whoop Micro FPV Drone
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    Features:
  • 7x16mm Brushed Motors,17600KV,to DIY your Tiny Whoop Drone.
  • Tiny whoop motor Diameter: 7.0mm Motor Length: 16mm Cable Length: 55mm, With 1.25mm JST Plug
  • Only 3.8g/pcs,Lightweight, durable, practical and convenient to use.
  • Compact, convenient and easy to replace.
  • High speed 56000 rpm is widely used for Blade Inductrix, Tiny Whoop flight controller.
Specs:
Color7x16mm 17600kv
Height0.393700787 Inches
Length0.787401574 Inches
Weight0.02645547144 Pounds
Width3.93700787 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Makerfire 4pcs 7x16mm 17600KV Brushed Motors 0.8mm Shaft with Micro JST 1.25 2P Connector CW CCW 716 Coreless Motors for Tiny 6X Beta65S Eachine E011 Tiny Whoop Micro FPV Drone:

u/WombatControl ยท 1 pointr/Multicopter

DON'T get that kit - the pieces are ancient and on a 2200mAh battery that thing will barely fly.

Here's a suggestion: instead of a 5-inch, build a Whoop. The advantage of doing that is 1) it's much, much cheaper, and 2) you could fly the thing in the classroom if you wanted.

Shipping won't be a problem - we're getting everything from Amazon prime.

BetaFPV F4 FC - We start with this. My first thought was to use the much cheaper Silverware-based Lite board. However, the problem with that is getting a transmitter that works with it. So instead we're going to go with a Betaflight board. Part of what you can do is use the Project Mockingbird tune on it and explain how the settings impact flight.

Beta65S Frame (Package of 2) - Ideally, we would use the set that includes the frame and motors, but sadly that's currently out of stock so we're going to have to buy the frame and motors separately.

These 7x16 motors - The BetaFPV motors are better, but those are out of stock at the moment. Plus, you're not going to be racing this thing, so we're not going to worry about great motors for this project.

FPV Camera and VTX - Again, we're not going for the greatest quality here, just something that will work. If you have access to a 3D printer, you can print off a mount. Otherwise, we're going to secure this to the board with some outdoor mounting tape and small rubber band hair ties.

Props - We're going with 4-blade for thrust - You get 16 of them, so 4 pairs.

Now you have a quad. What's our total price (as of today on Amazon, all with Prime shipping)?

$87.94 - Yup, you have a Betaflight enabled quad with OSD for less than $100. And this quad will actually be a decent flying one too. The only thing you will need to solder are the power wires to the camera.

We also need batteries and a charger. For the charger we're going to go with a basic USB charger. Nothing fancy, but it will do. For batteries, these batteries will be fine for your purposes. And we get 4 of them. We're at $108.92, with Prime shipping.

Now we have our aircraft, battery, and charger. We still need a transmitter and some FPV gear. This is where stuff gets really expensive, but we have some options that will work for your project.

First, BETAFPV sells a really basic transmitter that uses FrSKY for $39. Normally, I'd say get a QX7, but we're artificially restricting ourselves to Amazon Prime for this. This really is a no-frills, toy-grade transmitter, but it works. And now our total cost is at $150.

For FPV, you have two options. The first is a bargain-basement headset. Here's one for $50. Is it going to be a great headset? Heck no! But it will work just fine.

The other option is to display the FPV feed on a TV. If you're going to do an in-class presentation, I'd go that way. Make sure you have a TV with an analog input though! Here's a cheap FPV receiver with analog output. $16! You don't get diversity, you don't get a great antenna, but again, we're just going for the basics. This receiver requires a 12V power supply, which could either be a 3S LiPo or a plug-in one. Since you don't have any LiPos, let's just go with a wall power supply. $13.

Either way, you're at under $200 all-in. For your project, you can show how to install Betaflight, show how different tuning parameters affect flight, and even fly indoors for an in-class demonstration! Plus, if you decide to get into the hobby, you can get yourself a QX7 and a better set of FPV goggles and have a decent quad for indoor flying.

I haven't included any soldering equipment - for this, you just need a fine-tip soldering iron. You just need to attach the four lines of the FPV camera to the board - red to positive, black to negative, the camera output to the camera input on the board, and the board video output to the VTX input on the camera. The connections will be VERY small, so this is where getting help would be a good idea.

For the camera mount, there are any number of them on Thingiverse that would work just fine. Otherwise, get some 3M mounting tape and the small rubber bands used for kid's hair. Put the mounting tape on the board and use the rubber band between the tiny little nubs on the side of the frame to secure the camera down. If you have access to a 3D printer, this camera mount will work just fine. 3D printing the parts can be part of your class project.

This would give you literally everything you need to fly, some opportunities to set up Betaflight and tune things, and is something you could actually use if you decide to fly FPV when the project is done. Plus, everything's on Amazon Prime so the shipping should not be a problem.