Not really, especially at that price you linked to. The Hubsan has better video and has a built in 5.8ghz FPV screen (could use with FPV goggles) and unlike the Bugs has a follow me GPS mode, a nice touch. It also has a high rate Sport Mode and replacement batteries are higher mAh and about 30% cheaper, that adds up fast. The latest versions also come with a LiPo for the TX. Since Hubsan has brought down the price it is a good deal.You should check out the bugs 2:
https://m.tomtop.com/p-rm8131b.html?
Not sure if it has "follow me" but I think that feature is mainly on the higher priced quads.
I wouldn't say underpowered and FWIW it's WiFi range (and it's overall range in general) is excellent, almost amazing. But the Hubsan (which was about ~$300 last year) is just a better overall choice these days.So basically the bugs2 is an underpowered quad with a crappy wifi camera.
I'll check it out but I've found that many of the Windows apps aren't compatible with my chromebook.You can just use something like Windows Movie Maker to convert them to .MP4
Any conversion makes for a degradation in quality. But my point was the Bugs 2 AVIs that are troublesome compared to normal AVIs. All other AVIs I have play in Win 10. BTW AVI is just a container, the Bugs 3 puts crap inside. Many AVIs are MPEG4s inside.You can just use something like Windows Movie Maker to convert them to .MP4
I wouldn't say underpowered and FWIW it's WiFi range (and it's overall range in general) is excellent, almost amazing. But the Hubsan (which was about ~$300 last year) is just a better overall choice these days.
FWIW I won a Bugs 2C. At the time I entered the contest they were ~$190. It seems MJX chose to to save a few $ by going with plastic motors and what appears to be a camera of lesser quality that the 2W (watching YouTube footage bears this out) and the addition of a proprietary (and heavier) battery. What's odd is the massive AVI file produced, 3.2GB for 9 minutes. It's also odd that they won't play in Win 10 with the stock player, AVI was actually a Windows developed container.
Looking at the file they list it as M-PEG and uses an astounding 50Mbps (megabytes per second} framerate (the average Blu Ray disc is half that.)
'As a purely intraframe compression scheme, the image quality of M-JPEG is directly a function of each video frame's static (spatial) complexity. Frames with large smooth transitions or monotone surfaces compress well and are more likely to hold their original details with few visible compression artifacts. Frames exhibiting complex textures, fine curves and lines (such as writing on a newspaper) are prone to exhibit DCT artifacts such as ringing, smudging, and macroblocking.'
My $80 smartphone produces vastly superior video at 17Mbps using the more modern AVC/MPEG4 codec which of course plays in everything.
My 2C does fly nicely though. Quick RTH works well, but the one time I tried Smart RTH it flew up so high I lost track of it, I freaked out and turned it off. I guess I have to read the manual more fully.
MJX may have hit a homerun with the Bugs 3, but the Bugs 2 is barely a double.
Didn't you buy the one you are using now? You should be able to buy any number of cards/brands that work.I also discovered that there are hidden files on the micro SD card, so my assumption was that you could not just go and buy another card to resolve the problem.
No, I did not buy the card. It came with the bugs b2c which I purchased new. Some of the other people on the forum who were having the same problem with camera working once did buy new micro SD cards.Didn't you buy the one you are using now? You should be able to buy any number of cards/brands that work.
Is it a class 10?No, I did not buy the card.