DraganFly III Gyro-stabilized RC Helicopter
Pronoun54 writes "It hovers! It spins! It spies!
The Draganflyer III weighs just 17 ounces with its high-tech stabilization system. "As an eye in the sky, the Draganflyer III can be used indoors or out, up to a mile away, to take aerial views of real estate, promote products at trade shows, or give the guy in the next cube a close encounter he won't soon forget." "One more advantage of the Draganflyer III: if you're grounded by bad weather, you can still open the throttle and hover indoors." Their site has videos of this thing in action both indoors and out. Seems like it can move pretty fast at top speed." The Times has a piece talking about the piezo gyroscopes (including purty pictures) that the chopper uses to self-stabilize.
My birhtday is coming up - if you get me one, I'll be your best friend!
Russ
Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
at the link in the article ...
Their marketing people must be extremely happy!
$749.00 is a bit much though. At $200, I'd be ordering right now. :) Heck - at $400-$500 it would be a hella cool self b-day gift. I wonder how well they do after hitting a wall or roof.
Here's a project on sourceforge (GPL'ed):
autopilot
"It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
Does it come with a video camera and wireless video receiver?
:) Aerial surveillance and photography and stuff would be a neat little hobby :) (Hella expensive, though, I bet)
That would be fun
"hard to reach locations to make money on the side!" This has Jailbait written all over it!!!o:-)
Only 3 posts, and the site is already /.ed. I can barely load the page, and I'm using a 100Mb/s connection at work (no, that's not the network speed, that's the pipe). Google cache anybody?
There's no sig like SIGSEG
Couldn't the infantry use these things, or some suped-up version of it? Sounds like it'd be great for recon; let each unit have a couple of these babies, and they could see what was over a hill, or on the other side of a woods, without having to put themselves in danger, or calling in air support.
--
http://nemilar.net - Not your grandmother's soup kitchen
Why are they using 20 year old battery technology?
You'd think they'd want a light weight, longer
lasting power source like lithium ion or lithium
polymer. It wouldn't add more that $50 to the price.
The battery is probably the heviest item on the
thing. It just don't make sense...
Of course, you won't get the purty pictures:
: www.rctoys.com/draganflyer3.php+&hl=en&ie=UTF- 8
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:Zcv7fU8bM28C
--
http://nemilar.net - Not your grandmother's soup kitchen
more importantly -- it needs re-chargin' every 5 minutes or so.
My life in the land of the rising sun.
if not, imagine all the places (other than the shower) you could put that X10 you bought while you were drunk! ... delay for reader to close popup ad....
wouldn't that be fun!?
MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
Wait, that's what the post is trying to say without mentioning the word 'camera'. Can you say 'camera'? I knew you could.
Don't forget the VIDEO
/ 20 020808_HOWW_helicopter/cir_HOWW_heli_05.html
http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/technology
I bought one of these months ago and it SUCKS!!!
I'm an avid R/C pilot and must say that this is an expensive piece of junk.
I'm so glad I was able to sell it for almost what I paid for it.
No, you dont!
Spend the money on a REAL R/C plane or Heli.
This thing is garbage, I've owned one.
$750 is way too much for this piece of junk, where i live it won't even lift itself off the ground. (denver colorado)
if you want to see real r/c electric heli's try here:
http://www.hobby-lobby.com/elecheli.htm
I have been flying r/c gas-powered, gyro-stabilized helicopters for 8 years now. This is nothing new. Most people can buy a full fledged heli setup for $700 or so. Back about 5 years ago, solid state gyros (piezo gyros) came out and have made the old mechanical gyros seem slow and imprecise. For more info on "real" r/c helicopters here are some links:
. century.comh eli-world.comt aba-rc.com
.61 SX-H engine. Any questions, feel free to ask.
http://www.miniatureaircraftusa.com
http://www
http://www.heliproz.com
http://www.
http://runryder.com
http://www.fu
http://www.osengines.com
I fly an X-Cell Graphite 60 size helicopter with a futaba 9zhs (9 channel) computer radio controller, futaba gy601 piezo gyro, OS
http://www.apple.com/hotnews/articles/2002/05/drag anflyer/
Has pictures and some very limitted details on it. However this site might work a little longer...
How did they catch you? Follow the Draganflyer back to you?
No, it ran out of juice right above the target. D'oh.
Combine this with a fun GUI and we can chase osama out Afghanistan. So he hides in the tunnels eh? Just load up another GUI and down some
tunnels we go!
How long until this thing winds up on Thinkgeek?
I give it a month.
There are 01 types of people in this world. Those that understand binary, and me.
... attach a single-shot gun-barrel and a facial recognizion system and you have an over-used sci-fi plot-device. (Bruce Sterling probably used it first in 'Islands in the Net'.)
I shudder to think what the DOD boys might do with such a thing. At night, it would be pretty hard to detect.
It's a marvelous device. The one thing I was really bummed about was that it only went 5 minutes on battery. That's a pretty big limitation if you think about it. Even 15 minutes would be a heck of a lot better.
And the robotics professor who tried controlling it by computer really only got it to fly up 15 centimeters and land without help. That was a bit disappointing, as I'd love to work on programming one of these puppies.
--LP
What's being claimed for the Draganflyer is claiming is that hovering is essentially taken care of by the onboard processors, and all a novice flyer has to learn to do is move the joysticks in the direction they want to go. Compared to flying a regular R/C helicopter, this is trivial to learn. With a R/C heli, you have to understand quite a lot about how the collective, the "ailerons", the main rotor pitch, and the tail rotor pitch all interact in order to learn to fly, and you certainly can't just point it in the direction you want it to go and expect it to go there. With the Draganflyer, you apparently can.
I had a similar craft called the "UFO", which was maybe 50% larger than this one, but exactly the same design. Four props, two counter-rotating, with fancy stabilization electronics.
I've flow planes, gliders, gas helicopters, electric helicopters, and mini helicopters, but this 4-bladed craft was harder than any of them.
The problem is with yaw stability. Any time I tried to do a fast straight flyby, the craft would slightly rotate (yaw) in the wind. It's exceedingly hard to visually see which leg is the "nose" and keep it forward.
That, and the flight times are abysmally low. The four motors weigh quite a bit, and use a huge amount of power to stay airborne.
That, with the difficulty in forward flight makes one prefer hovering, where power is used even faster.
All in all, a nice idea, but I threw mine out after crashing it repeatedly from disorientation. I even tried spraypainting the nose leg orange, no luck. It's that very slow sneaky rotation that gets the controls all goofed up.
A helicopter has a tail fin that helps orient it nose-to-the-wind in flight. This craft needs something like that before it can fly figure eights with the same ease.
Did anybody else notice that they didn't spell DRAGON correctly even once on their website? Is this a joke or pun that I'm just not getting? Perhaps they are really that stupid.
On a side note, you could build one of these yourself for about $200.
Google's mirror is here.
If you think I'm karma whoring, please go and mod down some of my other posts. I could care less. =)
My
Limekiller
I submitted this article almost two month ago when I saw it on Apple's website. Is this the normal turn around on articles? Soooooo Loooooooong.
I hope this gets noticed, AC because I'm a lazy bastard. I used to fly RC heli's a lot but moved to Melbourne Oz and didn't want to cart mine with me so I packed it in.
w mv
Here is a video (sorry wmv file) of a dude who hooked up a wireless x-10 like camera to his rappy and flys it around the neighbourhood using his TV.
http://www2.1starnet.com/mprewitt/raptor_rpv01.
Never had the balls to do this though.
Anyone fly RC Helis in Melbourne??
NYTimes id: Username: slashdot1233 password: slashdot123
I'll probably burn more money in fuel than you'll pay me. On a clear day, with no wind I can hover my machine without any input for the entire tank of gas. Furthermore, my piezo gyro is a heading hold gyro so it'll maintain its heading while in the air. Don't make bets on stuff that you'll lose money on.
Others have already pointed out the open source Autopilot project.
The Draganflyer is limited to 5 minutes because it's so small and light, and runs on batteries. If you go with one of the more established conventional helis, you can get longer flight times. The longest times are still achieved by combustion engines, using either model fuel or regular gasoline, and it's quite easy to achieve more than 15 minutes with one of those.
However, I don't think it's any accident that the Draganflyer has an unconventional four-rotor design - this allows it to avoid many of the instabilities that a regular helicopter suffers from, and probably makes the job of programming an autopilot for it much easier.
Still, computer-controlled regular helis, even fully autonomous ones, are possible and have been done. There's even an annual International Aerial Robotics Contest. The site doesn't seem to be responding right now (secondary /. effect?), but here's one of the previous entries, the MIT/Draper Autonomous Helicopter Project.
In the past, these have been pretty expensive devices to put together. Nowadays, as the Draganflyer proves, it's not as expensive as it used to be. The piezo gyros are pretty cheap - in the $100 range for a decent one. Building your own computer-controlled helicopter is definitely doable. The Sourceforge project is probably a good place to start, especially since it'll be a lot easier if it's not a one-man project.
Crashing is a part of the learning experience. What many of us did is we take two long dowel and make an "X" out of them and attach it to the bottom of the heli. THis gives in a big footprint so if one was to come down the wrong way, the heli won't tip.
c ts&cat=20
Given the FMA co-pilot and heading hold gyro, the heli can fly on its owwn almost.
link to FMA co-pilot: https://www.fmadirect.com/site/fma.htm?body=Produ
troll alert.
Wonder if they could apply fuel cell tech to this to make it fly longer and "recharge" quicker.
*Weight: 11 lbs
_ sh ip.jpg
b el .jpg
. jp g
*Flight time: 10-15 minutes on each tank of gas. No recharging, just fill it and your off again.
*Cameras: Sure can put them on...
http://gewurtz.mit.edu/research/heli.htm#pics
http://runryder.com/gallery/00830/pic_of_camera
http://runryder.com/gallery/01683/RaptorCam3_la
http://runryder.com/gallery/01683/RaptorCam3_02
there are tons more if you want to see.
on which we can learn.
Its not that hard: http://n.ethz.ch/student/mmoeller/fms/index.html
I'll hand you my controls with wind and all. I'll run my heading hold gyro and an FMA Co-P. You can let the sticks go and it works great. Want a link?
d uc ts&cat=20
https://www.fmadirect.com/site/fma.htm?body=Pro
Sorry buddy, the DragonFly is nothing new.
Have you ever flown an r/c helicopter? I'll put you a $100 you haven't ever tried. Quit your whining. This guy you are arguing with has more knowledge and experience then you. I'd walk away before I get jacked by him.
to a 3 year old so he can drive around? Don't be stupid. Dragonfly is about as new as tacobell 'meat'. STFU.
IT can carry 1 ounce, enough for pure grade cocain to transport accross a border
Or some T's buy 100 of these with some 1ounc C4 or nerve gas/anthrax and you could do some damn ass damage.
THank god the Ts arent this smart eh!
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
Does writting code for a microprocessor somehow make you an authority on all things in this universe? I sure wish that were possible cause maybe all those pasty white programmers might be sleeping with models. Sorry lamer, go home.
I wasn't trying to say that the Draganflyer guys invented the idea of stabilization, but the fact is that most R/C helis today have no such technology.
In case you're just not understanding what the DraganFlyer does, you can think of it like your heading-hold gyro, but applied to more dimensions. It uses piezo gyros in multiple dimensions, in a similar way to what the FMA Copilot does using infrared differential.
In addition to that, the DraganFlyer's four rotor design and computerized control mechanism means that flying is intuitive - you don't have to deal with collective, pitch, etc. to make it fly, the computer translates the direction you want to go into the appropriate instructions for the aircraft.
In short, it seems you just haven't yet understood what the Draganflyer does. Hope I've cleared it up a bit for you.
I give you that it may be easier than a heli "8 years ago", but that isn't what I am saying or arguing. The FMA CoP was already out before this machine was. This isn't anything new to me. I've seen the builders at the local club do all sorts of weird projects. I guess my point was why spend $700+ for this piece of crap that is being marketed as an RC Heli when you can get yourself a .30 size machine for much cheaper. Sure Heli's might be complicated, but its no more complicated than any other airborne R/C sport (except maybe blimps).
The Vectron Flying Saucer is insanely fun and less than $100.
:-)
Check out this Tech TV article.
I bought one recently and my only regret is not letting the Vectron have it's recommended cool-down breaks. I was having too much fun and the constant use killed it in one weekend.
If you don't have vaulted ceilings, get some.
Yawn. I'll be amazed when it can serve up web pages and not get slashdotted.
--
I romp with joy in the bookish dark
next all we have to invent is 'the spice'
I know it's redundant, but just imagine the marketing potential if this thig gets bundled with X10 cameras.
"See what you've been missing in your nieghbor's second story bedroom"
T Money
World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
Or... "Spammer! Spammer! Spammer!"
IIRC, this has been around a long while under the name 'Roswell Flyer'. What you find is that while cheap, it's not terribly efficient. These types of configurations have severe limitations as far as their endurance as well as range. There are other VTOL configurations that are significantly better. For example, a 7 oz. VTOL tilt-wing machine that only uses two rotors, can hover for 3 minutes or fly forward up to 40mph for up to 15 minutes, and has a wireless camera on board. (It takes a lot more power to hover on the props than to get lift from the wings.) There's the 1.5lb. VTOL that is flown from a dual mode camera (video/IR) using LCD display goggles. There's also work underway to get a 1 hour battery powered VTOL UAV that can fly autonomously. BTW, the small piezo gyros are rate gyros and don't do diddly for slow drift - meaning that you can roll completely over uncommanded if it happens slow enough.
Don't forget the BANDWDITH
This is gonna do to the haircutting business what McDonalds has done to dinner.
Bulk discounts at stadiums are the wave of the future.
Table-ized A.I.
Similar concept, but more like a real r/c helicopter (and much less expansive too) is the Snelflight Hoverfly II:
:)
m
http//:www.creekhobbies.com
The one I'm considering now however (waaaay cool and relatively inexpensive) is the RandR Model Aircraft R/C Ornithopter (with in-flight movies):
http//:www.randrmodelaircraft.com
If only I could figure out how to r/c fold the wings so I could high-speed dive and scare the crap outa the folks in the park
This designer is so cool he's also got prehistoric flying animal r/c, some at 1.8 meter spans that actually use the head turing for rudder control!
http://www.randrmodelaircraft.com/Pteranodon.ht
Imagine this..
You bolt on a GPS unit, GPRS capabilities, and some clever microprocessor workings..
And what do you get?
Your own little robot slave.
It's exceptionally possible. You could have a 'helipad' bolted to your window-ledge, you program it as home (by GPS), and it uses GPRS communication to find out other destinations, guided by GPS.
It could go do your shopping for you, pick up your weed, whatever you want. Larger versions could be made for heavier loads.
And all the time, you can watch the view from the built-in camera via GPRS. That would rule.
Simple dopplar radar (inexpensive) can detect buildings and objects, to avoid them. It could use GPRS to transmit location (as GPS is mainly one-way), to a 'air traffic control' type scenario - to stop them hitting eachother. Set a flight-height, of say 200ft above ground and they wouldn't be a problem - it's about time we started using the air space between 100ft and 36,000 ft for something other than nothing.
Getting these things to fly themselves isn't a huge feat, they already have the majority of the code in the gyroscope control computer - getting it to follow coordinates and avoid stuff isn't such a task.
So who will build one? Obviousely the military have similar things, guided missiles and so forth, but this is consumer, and is possible..
Bring it on!
"Never let the truth get in the way of a good story..."
good promo, i want one too...
one thing peeves me, their sorry @$$ website uses quicktime and as a Linux user i don't have Apple/Mac's quacktime (pun intended)
I noticed a little bit of the Tea Party's "Touch" at the end of the 5-minute "orientation" video. These guys are cool in my book...
---- Politics: Kissing ass and pointing blames.
17 ounces are about 482g.
That is, if they are avoirdupois ounces. Should the submitter have meant troy ounces, then it's 529g. Duh!
(See MSDS)
bla
Coming soon to a theater of combat near you:
Puma
http://tinyurl.com/3t236
I don't own a draganflyer 3, but I have seen one fly, and I have owned a Vectron. I saw it fly at a R/C trade show (I fly R/C planes).
The Vectron has an extremely limited range, is always tetherd, and doesn't respond very well to my inputs. I got bored of it quick, but my 7-yr-old son is enjoying it. The Vectron and Draganflyer are not even comparable.
The people at the booth allowed many people try it out, and they crashed a few times, but didn't break anything. It is like flying a gas helicopter (without the added dimension pitch control can offer), but you can fly it inside, it always works, no maintenance, and you can crash into things and not break it. Seems like a good way to get into R/C helicopters.
I don't have any video making equipment, but being able to see what the helicopter sees on a TV would be pretty cool.
I don't think it would work with a X10 camera though...sorry guys.
watch your helicopter distintegrate from the recoil :)
This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
Smugglers can use this with added GPS to bring dope from Mexico...
Here is a competitor:
h tml
t er.html
http://www.sigmaautomotive.com/TechieMon/ksaucer.
Says here that is only flies 1-3 minutes but can also be "plugged in" for a longer flight.
A cooler version I think is the mini indoor helicopter for a little over half the price
http://www.sigmaautomotive.com/TechieMon/khelicop
Now this would be a fun toy at work!!
Is this the new "in article" ad campaign slashdot talked about adding a few months ago? Companies pay enough money, and suddenly their old tech toys show up on /., leading hundreds if not thousands of new buyers their way.
/. readers are not happy.
I wouldn't complain if this was new, but the "DraganFly III" really hasn't changed any since it came out a few years ago.
What's next, a article about case mods and a link to coolcasemods.com?!? No seriously, this is pathetic and
You could have a 'helipad' bolted to your window-ledge, you program it as home (by GPS),
I hope you help assist it in landing. My GPS us usualy acurate within 20 feet most of the time in the horizontal plane and 50 feet verticaly. It would need to be a big landing pad to avoid broken windows.
The truth shall set you free!
I bought one in early 1999.
Build stuff. Stuff that walks, stuff that rolls, whatever.
Piezo gyros are almost standard now for yaw stability on regular helis, but the ones now available for regular helis to better than the ones on the Draganflyer. Regular helis use a "flybar" in the rotor head that does the same thing the as the other two piezo elements on the Draganflyer - but, again, they do it better. The Draganflyer hovers with about the same difficulty as a regular heli - the feel isn't even much different - but once you get moving faster than a crawl, it becomes a real handful. Regular helis are actually much easier to control when flying with any speed. Regular RC helis also have aerobatic potential that fixed-pitch machines like the Draganflyer can't even come close to.
It's not a bad way to get the hand-eye coordination for hovering, but if (when) you want to get it flying around or get into aerobatics, you'll need something else entirely. And if you're looking for a way to get started with RC helis, a PC simulator is a much better investment.
Build stuff. Stuff that walks, stuff that rolls, whatever.
Some friends and I put gyros on a flybarless heli once, just to see what would happen, and while they tame down the bad behaviors, they don't help nearly as much as a flybar. The Draganflyer (fak Roswell Flyer) feels about as bad as a flybarless heli, and probably for the same reasons (no flybar on the Roswell, just wacky rotor flapping due to disymmetry of list). I'd prefer a flybar-equipped rotor over flybarless any day, and the (flybarless) Roswell Flyer / Draganflyer is no exception.
In short, it seems you just haven't yet understood what the Draganflyer does.
Seems to me he knows exactly what the score is. I've flown one. Have you?
Build stuff. Stuff that walks, stuff that rolls, whatever.
I added a vertical stabilizer to my Roswell (Draganflyer = Roswell Flyer v2.0, same electronics on a more robust chassis). The fin did help keep it pointed forward, but then the problem is the pitch & roll response. It turns out that a platform with four flybarless rotors fly just as bad as a heli with a single flybarless rotor. It's really hard to describe, but if you've flown a flybarless heli, you know what I'm talking about.
These are OK for indoor flying where you never build up much speed, but beyond that they're a real handful.
Build stuff. Stuff that walks, stuff that rolls, whatever.
Flight times: They all get about 10-15 minutes on a tank of fuel, as the other fellow said. The control system battery needs to be recharged every 4-6 flights. Eletrics typically fly 4-6 minutes on a charge, but flight times and performance are getting better all the time for those things (I'm hoping to switch to electric when they can make good power for 10 minute flights, but it will probably be a couple years at least). Gasoline powered helis (only available in the larger size, around 12 pounds) run for 25-45 minutes on a tank of fuel, but they don't have quite the same power-to-weight ratio as alcohol burners. Alcohol helis are more popular for aerobatics. Gassers are popular for aerial photography because they have almost no exhaust trail, and for everyday flyers who aren't as concerned with aerobatics and who enjoy cheap fuel (alcohol is $12-25/gallon depending on various factors including the nitro content).
Cameras: I put a video camera and wireless video transmitter on a couple of mine, with the intention of recording aerobatics from the 'pilots' point of view. There are small cameras that work pretty well for this, the handling of the helicopter was unchanged. Unfortunately, the video range you get with FCC-license-free video transmitters is not very good. It works well for upright flight, but the signal drops out a lot during aerobatics.
Click here for one of my videos. I made this one to demonstrate the video drop-out problem, so it's pretty bad. I had a couple others that (by pure luck) had better reception, but unfortunately I don't have copies online on a server that can take a slashdotting.
I got a ham license a couple summers ago specifically so I could get some more powerful transmitters for wireless video, but I haven't upgraded the video transmitter yet. It's still something I want to do, though. I'll get around to it eventually.
Build stuff. Stuff that walks, stuff that rolls, whatever.