Quadcopter lifting capabilities?

Simon

New Member
Hiya, I'm in the uk and I'm looking at buying a quad copter later this year, I am trying to find out what sort of weight they can lift, the reason I ask is I sea fish a lot but I need to get the weight and bait out further to sea for the big fish, so I'm thinking of using a quadcopter to carry the weight and bait and then drop it over the sea at further away, anyone any suggestions what model would be best to buy to manage something like this. Many thanks
 
Hi mate have a look on you tube at hobby king beer lift this will give you some idea of what big quads can lift , i have a 550 mm quad it has the ntm motors they are 380w each very powerful but add weight to the quad , this will be the problem getting the lift was the motor power comes up flight time comes down , but will still give you the time you need to fly out and back , i will put a link on here for a ecalc this will help you work out what you need , the talon v2 carbon fibre frame is 480grms so use this plus add the weight of the pay load , put this in to the weight box on the ecalc and do it not inc drive this will then work out for 4 escs 4 motors ,battery
if its like a bait swim feed with lins and hook fitted then you can use a rc bomb drop for an rc plane this will let you tow the line out and drop into the sea
A word of warning if you crash in to the sea the quad will be a total loss , there is a water proof quad frame but i dont know where you can get one here but will also leave a link
You will be better off to build than to try and covert one , if the quad route is going to be very hard they do rc bait boats for this job but a quad will be more fun
http://www.ecalc.ch/xcoptercalc.php?ecalc&lang=en
http://www.youtube.com/watch_videos...TQkC0&index=8&title=Popular+uploads&more_url=
 
A quad or tri can definitely carry a fishing weight, leader and lure! The trick is to either build your own, or adapt a ready-to-fly with a servo to let go of the line when you want it to. A lot of cheap pre-builts allow you to turn the LEDs on and off. You many be able to adapt that to a servo instead, using a relay to kick when LEDs power up. Another thing to be wary of is that the downdraft of the props produces updraft too, so you'll want to fly the copter UP a ways to produce a low drape of line before flying away to the drop point. Don't want that line to get sucked up and tangled in the props!

The build I'm working on now will have a gross lift of around 10lbs! of course the quad will weigh that down by almost half. But if you're using more than 5lbs of line, you're going for the "bigguns". It may also be interesting to dangle a fish finder from a quad and have a telemetry radio send back the results. Then you can FIND the fish before dropping the line.

As hotneil points out, you don't want the quad to drop into the water. The boat idea may be better! But adapting a cheapo pre-built with enough range may be better to start than build a $1000+ quad and lose it. You may also find that you like being able to take "selfies" of your buddies and your boat from a distance, and most quads have cameras.

Wouldn't it be funny if you found you had more fun flying than fishing? I can see lots of opportunities for getting video of things from a boat -- especially inaccessible rocky areas of coastline, flying around rocks isolated by surf, or just capturing your boat or others from the air. I imagine wearing goggles and flying while standing on a rocking deck may be the best way on earth to get sea sick though.
 
Back
Top