ar drone battery weight

If you are a seller for this product, would you like to suggest updates through seller support? Turnigy AR Drone Upgrade Battery Balance Lead AdapterTurnigy AR Drone Upgrade Battery... Please let us know if you found any issues with this product listing. We take our customer comments very seriously and in many cases our website modifications and product updates are a result of your comments! If you've seen a product elsewhere for a better price, please let us know! HobbyKing pride themselves on offering the best price, so if there if you see something cheaper elsewhere, let us know! Use your own balance charger to charge your Turnigy AR Drone Upgrade batteries with this adapter plate to keep your AR Drone Upgrade batteries in tip-top condition. Simply plug this handy device into the balance socket (JST XH) of your charger and load the battery onto the plate so that the balance pins locate into the contacts on the battery. Specs:Plug type: JST XHDimensions: 88 x 30 x 12mm

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macdev drone dx laufset Venom 30C 1S 150mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with E-Flite MCX Plug
macdev drone dx ersatzteile Venom 15C 1S 600mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with JST Plug Venom 30C 1S 500mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with JST Plug Venom 25C 1S 250mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with Micro Losi Plug Venom 30C 1S 500mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with E-Flite MCPX Plug

Venom 30C 1S 250mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with E-Flite MCPX Plug Venom 30C 1S 600mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with Micro Losi Plug Venom 30C 1S 400mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with Micro Losi Plug Venom 45C 1S 180mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with E-Flite MCX Plug x2 Packs Venom 25C 1S 800mAh 3.7V LiPo Battery with Micro Losi and JST Plugs Venom 25C 1S 1000mAh 3.7V LiPo Battery with Micro Losi and JST Plugs Venom 45C 1S 180mAh 3.7V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with E-Flite MCX Plug x4 Packs Venom Drone 45C 1S 250mAh 3.7V LiPo Battery with E-flite MCX Plug - 2 Packs Venom 30C 2S 800mAh 7.4V LiPo Micro Drone Battery with JST Plug Blade Inductrix 200 FPV Camera Drone 15C 3S 800mAh 11.1V LiPo Battery by Venom Venom 50C 3S 850mAh 11.1V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug Venom 50C 3S 1000mAh 11.1V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug) Venom 50C 4S 850mAh 14.8V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug

Venom 75C 3S 850mAh 11.1V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug Venom 50C 3S 1300mAh 11.1V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug) Venom 50C 4S 1000mAh 14.8V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug) Venom 75C 3S 1000mAh 11.1V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug Venom 75C 4S 850mAh 14.8V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug Venom 15C 3S 2200mAh 11.1V LiPo Drone Battery - Uni 2.0 (XT60, EC3, Deans) Plug Venom Drone 45C 1S 250mAh 3.7V LiPo Battery with E-flite MCX Plug - 4 Packs Venom 75C 3S 1300mAh 11.1V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug) Venom 50C 4S 1300mAh 14.8V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug) Venom 75C 4S 1000mAh 14.8V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug Venom 30C 3S 1350mAh 11.1V LiPo Drone Battery - Uni 2.0 (XT60, EC3, Deans) Plug Venom 30C 4S 1400mAh 14.8V LiPo Drone Battery - Uni 2.0 (XT60, EC3, Deans) Plug Venom 50C 3S 1800mAh 11.1V Drone Racing LiPo with Universal 2.0 Plug

Venom 30C 3S 1400mAh 11.1V LiPo Drone Battery - Uni 2.0 (XT60, EC3, Deans) Plug Venom 75C 4S 1300mAh 14.8V FPV Drone Racing LiPo Battery (XT60, EC3, Deans Plug)While other flying-camera makers have gone after enthusiasts, the Parrot Bebop is very approachable to average consumers looking to start shooting aerial video and photos without a big investment. (There's a good reason why you can find Parrot's drones in major retailers including Best Buy, Apple and Harvey Norman, as well as from mobile service providers.) Made from foam, strong plastic and fiberglass, the Parrot Bebop is the safer, gentler quadcopter that you can pilot with the smartphone in your pocket. In an attempt to capture some of those enthusiasts, however, Parrot perhaps stretched a bit too far, making something that was too pricey for beginners and with not enough features or performance for experienced users. It's good for what it is, but in category that's growing rapidly, it's a tough sell. Drones that came before it, the Bebop can be up and running in minutes.

You'll want to charge up a battery, of course, and install Parrot's FreeFlight 3 app on an iOS, Android or Windows device. And if you're flying indoors, you can clip on the protective propeller hull, but really that's about it. There are almost no instructions included in the box, though. To figure out the controls, you can download a user guide from Parrot's site or browse the mobile app's Help section, where you'll find written and video tutorials for the Bebop. There have been several feature updates to both the Bebop and FreeFlight app, but because the tutorials remain unchanged for the most part, some things you'll have to figure out on your own. With the $499 Bebop (£400; AU$800) you'll get two batteries and one charger; the indoor hull and four additional propellers with a small mounting tool to lock them in place. For an additional $400 (£330; AU$700), you can pick up a Bebop bundled with Parrot's Skycontroller, which can also be purchased separately for $499 (£400; If you're not a fan of flying by touchscreen alone, the Skycontroller is a very large, clunky wireless controller that gives you two joysticks, discrete controls for the camera, a button for taking off and landing and one for emergency motor cutoff, status lights for the battery of the Bebop and the controller and a return-to-home button.

Additionally, you can wirelessly pair a tablet or phone with it for first-person-view (FPV) flying. The Skycontroller runs on Android, which allowed Parrot to install the FreeFlight app on it, so you don't need to pair a mobile device to fly -- you just won't have a visual from the camera. (It also means it takes a minute to boot up before you can use it.) A full-size HDMI output on the side lets you connect an external display to see what the camera sees and also supports VR headsets like the Oculus Rift, completely immersing you for FPV flight. On top of the Skycontroller is an amplified Wi-Fi radio and four antennas allowing you to fly farther -- up to 1.4 miles (2.3km) -- than you can using a mobile device alone, which is up to 820 feet (250 meters). Unless you're in an area free of wireless interference and obstructions, this is more of a theoretical distance (for both, actually) and nothing you should actually attempt. Keep in mind, too, that while you might be able to fly out that far, with the Bebop's brief battery life, someone better be waiting at the other end.

Speaking of battery life, the Skycontroller uses the same pack as the Bebop, and when you buy the bundle you get a total of three batteries. Regardless, if you want physical controls as well as increased wireless range, the Skycontroller gives you those things, along with a place to mount a phone or tablet. There are, however, many options in the vicinity of the $1,000 mark, such as the DJI Phantom 3 Advanced or for GoPro owners, 3DR's Solo -- or any number of other, lesser-known quadcopters. Also, the build quality on my test Skycontroller was a bit iffy given its price, and the thing is really big compared to transmitters for other models. The Bebop's foam body and ABS-reinforced structure might look a bit less polished than other ready-to-fly (RTF) quadcopters, but it is deceivingly tough. The materials keep the Bebop light -- its maximum weight is 410 grams (14.5 ounces). It's compact, too, measuring roughly 12 inches (28cm) square and 1.5 inches (3.6cm) tall. Since the camera is electronically stabilized on three axes, there's no fragile gimbal to worry about should you crash.

If you do crash and damage a component, Parrot has made replacement parts available -- from props and batteries to camera and motherboard -- for you to buy and install yourself. Even if you don't crash, you'll probably want to buy another battery or two, some extra propellers and a few spare landing feet (I lost three of four after just a few flights). The camera is a step up from the one found on its previous models like the AR.Drone 2.0, with an f2.2 fish-eye lens that has a 180-degree angle of view and a 14-megapixel sensor. Though the camera can't physically move, you can digitally pan and tilt it to help you get the shot you're after. It can capture video at 1080p full-HD resolution; Drone 2.0 is limited to 720p. Video is recorded to the Bebop's 8GB of internal storage (there's no microSD or SD card slot) in MP4 format. Photos can be captured as JPEGs or Adobe DNG raw format. Drone 2.0, the Bebop has a GNSS chipset with GPS, Glonass and Galileo built in. The chipset allows the Bebop to return to its take-off location on its own and hover in place 2 meters above the ground.