Helicopter
Author
Discussion

Smiler.

Original Poster:

11,752 posts

254 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
First post in this forum - yay.

I recently acquired a cheap RC helicopter. After hours of fun indoors, I want one that will work outdoors (and can be used in my garden).

With a budget of £100 max, any recommendations?

I'd prefer battery powered.

I quite like the look of this


Globs

13,847 posts

255 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
Helicopter, outdoors and £100 does not compute, sorry.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

222 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
Blade SR can be flown outside for not much more than your budget.

Smiler.

Original Poster:

11,752 posts

254 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
Globs said:
Helicopter, outdoors and £100 does not compute, sorry.
er, thanks.

daveparry

988 posts

224 months

Globs

13,847 posts

255 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
OP: Sorry my answer wasn't the one you were hoping for, would it help if I lie instead?

rhinochopig said:
Blade SR can be flown outside for not much more than your budget.
If there is no wind - they're not that fast TBH but better than Coaxial.
For proper wind performance you are 6 channel CP helicopters that required a big learning curve to fly, and over £200 to get kitted out.

Go to www.helifreak.com, and read the getting started forums.
To do it properly you are looking at £200-300 minimum, with experience of picking what works at low prices.

iphonedyou

10,166 posts

181 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
Globs said:
If there is no wind - they're not that fast TBH but better than Coaxial.
For proper wind performance you are 6 channel CP helicopters that required a big learning curve to fly, and over £200 to get kitted out.

Go to www.helifreak.com, and read the getting started forums.
To do it properly you are looking at £200-300 minimum, with experience of picking what works at low prices.
Perhaps if you sounded like less of an arse, it would help. Your second response was much more helpful than the first, and sounded less stereotypically nerdy heli enthusiast wink

Globs

13,847 posts

255 months

Sunday 27th May 2012
quotequote all
iphonedyou said:
Perhaps if you sounded like less of an arse
Thanks, I love you too but no kinky stuff Ok?

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Monday 28th May 2012
quotequote all
Nahh these are what you need biggrin


CharlieCrocodile

1,227 posts

177 months

Monday 28th May 2012
quotequote all
mrloudly said:
Nahh these are what you need biggrin

no no no no no

THIS is what you need........ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STdAr1JNXIU

Failing that get a Goblin smile

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

222 months

Monday 28th May 2012
quotequote all
CharlieCrocodile said:
mrloudly said:
Nahh these are what you need biggrin

no no no no no

THIS is what you need........ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STdAr1JNXIU

Failing that get a Goblin smile
Rubbish, the real one has five blades.

Joking apart, that thing is bloody awesome.

Smiler.

Original Poster:

11,752 posts

254 months

Monday 28th May 2012
quotequote all
Right then. Thanks for the top tips gentlemen.

I have, ahem, reconsidered things in light of the above & will return to my Christmas Cracker effort until I have a proper budget.

Thanks again smile

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Monday 28th May 2012
quotequote all
IMHO push a bit further and go for the MCPX. It's a crashworthy little beast, bits are cheap and it'll stand you in good stead for bigger ones, they fly just the same ;-)

FussyFez

972 posts

200 months

Thursday 7th June 2012
quotequote all
I started out on a 20 pound co-ax. Its the best place to start and you should stay there till your 100% comfortable.

My next step was to buy a spektrum dx6i and an msr, I managed to get both for a £180 bundle. Just as stable as the coax but much more involving. You can fly it outside, in low winds, but you soon find its limits if your enthusiastic.

I got to the point with the msr that I could land it anywhere big enough to get the skids on, but the self stabalising effect of the fly bar was holding me back.

I recently got an msrx. Its still fixed pitch (the rotor bpades dont change pitch angle for lift, the blades spspeed up and slow down) so its user friendly, but the lack of flybar makes the world of difference and within a few days im as confident with it as I was with the msr. Its a completely different beast, and without the msr it would have been much harder.

I think the moral of the story is get somthing small enough to fly indoors, but when its a calm day, you can set it free a little outside. You also want to step up to four channels so you have aileron (sliding/rolling left and right rather than turning/spinning) before stepping up to full collective pitch. Your looking at lots more money and alot less air time. Step it up gradualy and you can have loads of fun whilst keeping costs down. Once your hooked, youll soon be eyeing up £500 worth of heli (minus electrics).

I can highly reccomend the msr, msrx and dx6i, but I hear walkera do some excellent 'starter' helis aswell as eflite.

Sorry for the essay.

Have fun!

Smiler.

Original Poster:

11,752 posts

254 months

Thursday 7th June 2012
quotequote all
FussyFez said:
I started out on a 20 pound co-ax. Its the best place to start and you should stay there till your 100% comfortable.

My next step was to buy a spektrum dx6i and an msr, I managed to get both for a £180 bundle. Just as stable as the coax but much more involving. You can fly it outside, in low winds, but you soon find its limits if your enthusiastic.

I got to the point with the msr that I could land it anywhere big enough to get the skids on, but the self stabalising effect of the fly bar was holding me back.

I recently got an msrx. Its still fixed pitch (the rotor bpades dont change pitch angle for lift, the blades spspeed up and slow down) so its user friendly, but the lack of flybar makes the world of difference and within a few days im as confident with it as I was with the msr. Its a completely different beast, and without the msr it would have been much harder.

I think the moral of the story is get somthing small enough to fly indoors, but when its a calm day, you can set it free a little outside. You also want to step up to four channels so you have aileron (sliding/rolling left and right rather than turning/spinning) before stepping up to full collective pitch. Your looking at lots more money and alot less air time. Step it up gradualy and you can have loads of fun whilst keeping costs down. Once your hooked, youll soon be eyeing up £500 worth of heli (minus electrics).

I can highly reccomend the msr, msrx and dx6i, but I hear walkera do some excellent 'starter' helis aswell as eflite.

Sorry for the essay.

Have fun!
Cheers buddy, very helpful thumbup