Kaideng K70C Motorws cut off mid flight!

Zak Mazzei

Member
Hi, I recently bought the Kaideng k70c from bang good, i took it out on its first flight and the motors just cut off mid flight and it crashed to the ground, it did that 3 times. Please can you help me to fix this problem, its very frustrating.
 
How close is "very close to me"? Read the maximum control range listed for your quad. Write it down. Take the auad out to where you normally fly it, and place it on the ground. Walk away from it with the controller turned on (If it has FPV capability, turn that on), without thtottling up to lift off. Measure the distance as you walk away until you no longer get a response from the controller, or you lose FPV reception. If that is farther than the control range listed for the quad, then you've established that it isn't "very close to me", but that you are attempting to fly beyond your effective control range. The problem (and conflict), is (at least here in the US) between the FCC, and the FAA. The FAA allows you to fly up to a maximum altitude of 400 feet, "within line of sight". "Within line of sight" may be to a line of trees or a building rooftop, 300 feet away from where you're standing, or to the vanishing point nearly a mile away, if you're out in the desert in New Mexico. The question with the latter is: Can you amplify the transmission to reach out to the vanishing point, and if so, to what level is allowed?
 
Good eyes.
The FAA rule is vague with: "Within line of sight", in that it doesn't specifically prohibit the use of telescopic lenses to enhance "line of sight"). FPV isn't "line of sight", as you're not actually looking at the drone itself with FPV, but viewing from an onboard pilot's perspective. "Within line of sight" implies viewing the drone itself (Work with an around enough lawyers long enough, and you start to think like them....). Since telescopic lense viewing inhances "line of sight", you maintain compliance.
 
I tried putting the drone on the ground and walking away, the range is NOT a problem. Im thinking it could be a faulty transmitter?
 
I tried putting the drone on the ground and walking away, the range is NOT a problem. Im thinking it could be a faulty transmitter?
But how far did you walk from it before losing control (Such as throttling up to lift a few inches off the ground), compared to when it happened while fully airborne? It's harder to judge distances in the air, with nothing else nearby to use as a reference point for distance. If the transmitter is faulty while it's in the air, being on the ground won't produce a better result, as it will still be defective. Repeat the walking test, and measure the distance. Try somewhere like a high school football field, where the distance is already measured and marked off. You already know what the manufacturer claims the maximum control distance is. If it is (for example) 150 meters/492.12 feet and you find that you lose control after only a distance of 100 meters/328.08 feet in that open field, then you can narrow the fault down to either the transmitter or the reciever. If on the other hand, you walk the full distance claimed by the manufacturer and still have a good response from the receiver, and even so after walking still farther away, then, what's happenening is that you'rer most likely flying beyond the recommeded range, due to losing accurate measure of distance. Most likely because with nothing nearby in the air that you can compare for distance, you're off on your estimate of the actual distance that you are attempting to control it at. IE: It's farther out than you think it is. What I'm suggesting is to eliminate human error as a factor, before spending money to replace components that may not be at fault.
 
He's stated twice that it happened close to him. I don't think range is a problem.

If this was the first time you flew it, it's possible the battery isn't charged properly.
 
He's stated twice that it happened close to him. I don't think range is a problem.

If this was the first time you flew it, it's possible the battery isn't charged properly.
"Close" is a relative term. And since he didn't mention a specific distance, there is no way to know how close to him was "close". Without knowing at least an approximate distance, we have to eliminate human error first, before going to the time and expense of replacing costly electronic parts that may or may not be defective. But presuming that he fully charged the battery before flight, we still need to eliminate the possibility that he simply flew it beyond the effective control range, and it simply dropped after the battery could no longer power the motors before he could have/would have moved closer himself, to regain control.
 
Last edited:
"Close" is a relative term. And since he didn't mention a specific distance, there is no way to know how close to him was "close". Without knowing at least an approximate distance, we have to eliminate human error first, before going to the time and expense of replacing costly electronic parts that may or may not be defective. But presuming that he fully charged the battery before flight, we still need to eliminate the possibility that he simply flew it beyond the effective control range, and it simply dropped after the battery could no longer power the motors before he could have/would have moved closer himself, to regain control.
about 6 meters
 
Six meters/19 feet, 8.2 inches, is less than a truck length from you. How far out did you measure off while it was still on the ground, before you could no longer control it? Also, how high up was it when you lost control? You can fly it beyond your control range upward, as well as outward.
 
Six meters/19 feet, 8.2 inches, is less than a truck length from you. How far out did you measure off while it was still on the ground, before you could no longer control it? Also, how high up was it when you lost control? You can fly it beyond your control range upward, as well as outward.
Quit trying to confuse him, it's not a range problem
 
He only stated the estimated distance once, and that was in his most recent response. He didn't say how high the quad was at that six meter distance. It could have been six meters out, and half a kilometer up. Possibly well beyond the maximum control range from altitude alone. The goal is to eliminate the easier/less costly causes, before resorting to spending money on expensive components. Not everybody has "deep pockets".
 
range seemed fine, it cut off very close to me.

I tried putting the drone on the ground and walking away, the range is NOT a problem.

about 6 meters
 
fdh.jpg
 
Okay, you're convinced of that. Other than one or more motors cutting out, what else did you notice? Unusual sounds, smoke, irrating movements? Anything unusual with the controller itself before the quad crashed?
 
Back
Top