I don't have much experience at all really. My first quad was one of those super-tiny Estes copters, which wasn't the best choice to learn with. It was very sensitive to even the tiniest movements of the sticks. Almost lost an eye several times, lol. Also, the small size combined with the surprisingly bright LED's made it difficult to tell which end was the front and which was the rear.
My next purchase was a Sky Viper "stunt drone," and despite being a $40 walmart toy, it was/is a joy to fly and changed my interest in quads from a mild curiosity into a full fledged addiction. I practiced with it until I could fly it around the house without crashing it into lamps and other fragile stuff.
Then I purchased the big brother to the Sky Viper stunt drone, which had a small camera. It wasn't quite as fun to fly, but was more powerful and had a larger capacity battery. Unfortunately, I got a little too ambitious while flying it outdoors after only owning it for two weeks. I wanted to see how high I could take it, (which was pretty impressive actually), and while it was up there I started the camera while rotating the quad to record the area 360 degrees. After spinning it around a couple times the wind picked up and started carrying it over the trees, (I live in a heavily wooded rural area). Of course, after spinning it around I wasn't sure which direction it was facing and before I could figure it out my newest drone was gone, lol! Still haven't been able to find it. I got a new one two days ago, so I'm able to continue learning again.
Anyways, while I've had enough "stick time" to react instinctively and become familiar with how a quad moves, I can guarantee I don't have the skills to push even the most forgiving racing quad, although I'm confident I can learn without destroying it in the process if I end up purchasing one.
Thanks for the suggestion about the Echine! I didn't realize I could get a decent "racing" quad for that price.
I have another question, though. I'm very interested in flying FPV using goggles rather than a screen. Some of the goggles I've looked at seem to suggest a binocular setup, is there a goggle/camera setup that gives the pilot a degree of depth perception? I've yet to find anything that explains things in newbie terms. The main reason I'm interested in FPV is because I have a lot of difficulty handling the right stick once the quad is facing a new direction. FPV removes that struggle, and it would be awesome to have depth perception while flying FPV. Maybe mount two cameras spaced apart, each transmitting to the corresponding eye via goggles?
Thanks again for the help!
P.S. While my budget is limited, I expected to end up paying around $350 for the quad + $350 for the goggles, so I'd welcome anybody's quad suggestions that would fit that budget.