Toy quadcopter considerations

speedlever

New Member
I was recently bitten by the quadcopter bug and have been doing a little research to scratch that itch. From what little I've read, the Syma X11 or the Hubsan x4 107L seem decent to get me started for around $30-$40-ish.

But then I got to thinking that it might be fun to have a camera on board and so the Syma X5C-1 for $55 seems interesting. Plus, it seems to have more of a standard (vs video game) style controller (which may be worthless at this level).

One review I came across touted the gear driven props of the X11. I have no idea whether or not that's important or just fluff. And while the camera on the X5C-1 is interesting, without FPV, does it really offer any value other than novelty? How can you even tell what you're videoing... and the battery life...?

I found the X11 on Amazon with some extra Tenergy 380mAh batteries and a Thinkmax 4-in-1 battery charger for about $55. I'm kinda leaning that way unless there are better options for a complete QC novice.

I'd appreciate any suggestions from anyone with a bit of experience in this field to help me get moving in the right direction. (maybe even consider getting a Turnigy 9X transmitter?... or is that overkill, even at $60?)
 
Hi mate most toy quads will have a transmitter that is only for that quad the FPV system is not as good as a hobby grade set up , once you get to hobby grade things are better , if you want a quad that flies well can be fixed easy ,parts are easy to get and a transmitter that you can use later on then this is what you need but its above the price you asked for ? i know they dont have a camera but learn to fly first then go 450+ size hobby grade quad and a good FPV set up
Dx6i new or second hand ,due to the new dx6 out the dx6i is now a good buy
eflite blade nano qx or QX
If over your price or if your really want FPV then go for hubsan , but this transmitter is still only for this model
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&r...tgHbribgthNoODZ7Q&sig2=tadL1ER6AzNm47qf3Vfzww
 
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