mozquito dude
and other dudes dude
you guys are dripping with practical experience
if you guys could take a moment to cook that down into a concise, inclusive read about batteries it would be way cool for all of us new suckers - there is a lot of information to learn about LIPOs i guess, but it takes *months* of pecking around the net to absorb it
eg. once a newbie figures out that "3s" is the same as "3 cell" it is a step forward. no one is born into this world knowing "s" is an abbreviation for "cell", and because of it, you get weeks of reading information that one is unable to absorb. a newbie doesn't know whether "s" is "cell" or some other parameter that they don't know about yet.
but it's pretty clever, how "s" is "cell" because they sound the same. "oh well that settles it for certain"
what are the practical performance pragma of a 2s versus a 3s versus 1 or 4 or 429? where are newbies supposed to find out, except throwing money away until they finally get enough experience to know?
if you are using a 3.7v, then *i guess* you can use a (imaginary) 4.7v as well, as long as it has sufficient amperage???? you can use higher voltage. as far as i'm aware, you need a minimum amperage for electronic circuits to operate, and they would also have a maximum the components can physically handle.
you know, i'm almost 50 and write my own software and all of that stuff. but i have never owned a "personal electronic device" like a cell phone because i don't want people calling me all the time. so i don't have any experience using batteries apart from aa aaa c and d that were around a half century ago. to find all thsi stuff out, i gotta read the wikipedia on LIPO technology and screw around for hours until i can wheedle all that crap into practical information pertinent to this material.
why can't someone just write it somewhere and make it a sticky EH
moz you say
max 4.20
min 3.80
but for what???? all batteries in the world? batteries named claude that like to dress up as fusiliers and go on holidays n the seychelles? what are we talking about here mate? can you qualify that data for readers pretty please
i mean, the dude is talkign about 7.4 v and it dies when he hits 5v, so i can't see anyhow how 4.2 relates to what was discussed previously
are you saying that minimum usable power of a battery is about 90% of its rated voltage? i can't tell, confused by too much imagination here for reals.
OP - as far as i can tell from watching other people fly quads, and from the short amount of time with an eachine e011 before it flew away, yep, as people say, the "minimum" operating voltage is pretty high in comparison to the rated value, which makes sense really. you're not going to fly at 0.2v left ("reductio ad absurdum" = logic is the single most useful thing you can learn to improve the quality of your discourse and rhetoric and rationale). the e011 (and a lot of other quads it seems) is rated at about 5 minutes. some commercial models are lower than that for racing. i saw a guy on youtube with a balsa frame and arduino who had a 30 minute flight time, definately not a racer build tho.
it's kind of a weird paradigm - today you can buy all these parts and plug them into each other and build just about anything, without having to know anything about electricity. in my experience, electricity is taught like a lot of other technical fields, there is a lot of intentionally confusing information in the entry level information to keep the riffraff out..... eg. the way people insist that programming c is not easy, or that math is hard, especially if you are a girl. anyway congratulations on getting into the air!