fpv250 mw 33

 

About

So i have this so called Racer 250 size quadcopter in hand after got me a good second hand price from my buddy which packaged from Hobbyking.com fpv250 mw 2combo set DIY assembly kit last year.  I took a bite because all those fads and trendy stuff about mini quad racer spawn all over the internet, so curiosity get the best of me.  What i got here is a FPV DIATONE 250 mini quadcopter platform with hardware mostly from Hobby King's line of Multistar motors and esc combos, from KK2 board for my first tryout to MultiWii Pro flight controller on second build and some FPV sets installed.  Took me a month to figure out the right PID's and with the help of my buddy (Mr. Voon) to get it fly right especially when transitioned to MultiWii Pro.    Did i have some fun...hmmmm...yes i did but short lived because flying solo high speed racing around on 250 alone is boring.  Further more my locals are late bloomer on 250 so i have to move on to another project.  Others crash a lot because having hard time to get the PID setting right. 

 After playing around few months i decided to put my review and stuff that might interest you in this build.  If you're into thrill of speed  like Star Wars pod racer like you seen in the movie zooming around obstacles, tailgating your buddy drones, slalom around trees and stuff this is for you.....and yes don't forget to buy spare props you might need it.  You need some crazy flying skills, good eyes and reflexes to steer the quad around the circuit.  This thing flips!  The cost of building a 250 size quad is cheaper provided you already have your existing FPV gears and radio transmitter on pilot side:  4x motors, bunch of propellers, 4x ESC, cheap mini flight controller boards such as CC3D, KK2, NAZE, MultiWii or equivalent, radio receiver, video transmitter, a camera and a 250mm size quad frame....all in miniature size..and basically they are cheap because they are small.  Only your skills will prolong its survivability both during flight and build. 

So here the things you might expect from an FPV 250 size quadcopter.

I have to let you guys know that tuning Flight Controller PID is major factor before getting it to fly right.  Building and assembly is a walk in the park.  Getting the right ESC set to match the motor KV also vital.  Most quadcopter of this size must use ESC with "SimonK" firmware installed to ensure fast reponse and high kHz timming between the flight controller and the motors responses.  Else ESC with "BLHeli" firmware installed also a great choice too.

fpv250 mw 15 

 


Mo
del specification & setup

fpv250 mw 18Airframe type: Quadcopter 250mm
Branding/Manufacturer: DIATONE
Model name variant: DIATONE FPV250
Material build: Nylon plastic
Rotor to rotor width: 250mm x 250mm
Flying weight: 380~gram
Flight control board: KK2.0 (First build) ~ MultiWii Pro + GPS (Second Build).
ESC: HK Multistar 10A with 5V/1A internal BEC (sucks!...buts its cheap please avoid this crappo esc...have no choice to use it for being cheapo.)
Motors: 1704 1900KV brushless
Proppellers: Gemfan/Turnigy 3 blade 5x3
Radio receiver: FrSky 2.4ghz telemetry type with diversified antenna.
Main battery: 2200~2700mah 3s 35c~45c

 

 

My DIY FPV specification.

fpv250 mw 19Below are list of hardware needed for my FPV specification:

Building

Working on small stuff on 250 frame is not that difficult but actually time consuming on tunning to get it fly the way you wanted.  You'll need some basic soldering skills and do some research about setting up PID on your respective flight controller. You can't just simply "plug n fly" it like bigger multirotor fpv250 mw 7frame.  I have to trim the wires, remove unnecessary weight, keep electric/magnetic  sensitive hardware away from each other, get overall weight distribution equal on each side, select the right combo of esc, motor and battery to get the right thrust, more work on flight controller PID's and lastly expect some crashes on your first maiden due to miscalculated PID.....that's why you need to buy more spare propellers.  I remember each rotor arm i have to replace 5x set of props until i get the PID right.  I manage to get my flying weight around 380gram running on 3s 2200mah 35c at final built.   The first build runs on KK2.0 FC board + GOSDII (UOSD firmware) , lastly on my final built was running on MultiWii Pro FC board + minimOSD (KVOSD firmware) which give me extra RTH and altitude hold in the open field.  Make sure to get any ESC with "SimonK" or "BLHeli" firmware to get the flight response right on the motors.  I'll provide the links to community page how you can tune this FC (Flight Controller board) down below the page and also shopping list to get the right stuff.

 

FPV building level difficulty/rating: Medium (7/10)
FPV equipment setup grade: Basic (KK2)/Advance (MultiWii Pro + GPS)
Building hours required:  12 hours.
Skill required: Soldering
Critical issues during installation: Flight controller PID tuning.
Required additional mods/must do improvement: Wire and weight trimming

 

My advice on your first purchase and build on this is don't go for carbon fiber material parts and expensive stuff yet.  You'll be super sorry on your first crash.  Carbon fiber cracks and breaks on first crash especially during your first calibration and  tuning flight. Carbon fiber are overrated material.   Nylon & plastic bent and deform but still held the parts well and give you another second or third chance to fly before you need to replace the parts.

fpv250 mw 8

 

fpv250 mw 34 

 fpv250 mw 6

 

FPV flight characteristic and performance

Its fast, its twitchy and sofpv250 mw 4metimes i have to put fight on my YAW. Lots of PID tuning along the way and bunch of spare propellers ready in a box to tag along.  Lots of time spending tuning PID...almost giving up flying 250.

Minimum level of flight experience required/flight-hours:
Beginner(5 hour)
Nature of platform handling experience/skill required:
Intermediate ~ Advance
Self leveling capability in thumbs-off stick situation: Yes (Stabilized mode)
Take-off & landing difficulty:
Easy~Just ok
Take-off weight:
<380g~400g
Hand launch:
No....only if you're good at it but not recommended
Max tilt angle: 43 degree...over than that it'll flipped!
Bail-out/fail safe recovery altitude limit: -
FPV flight/radius:
500m ~ 800m max (given above FPV spec/setup)
FPV safe distance range for testing: 300~800m (Open field)
Flight time: 8~10 min
Ground spotter visibility (LOS): 150~200m

 

 

Safety issue

Flying brick, that's how i feel about it.  Sturdy plastic frame, bunch of hardware cramp beside each other, solid sturdy build, fast spinning rotor rpm, fast and fast spinning blade sure will trim any grass without problem.  Be aware tiny stuff have same slicing power as bigger ones since they have more RPM brushless motor power per-rotor.  Not a best quad to be buzzing around the park full of people around. Another note that they do have high pitching buzz sounds from the rotor due to high RPM blade vibration at high decibel, i could hear 300m away from where i stand so its not good to annoy your neighborhood....its sounds like huge buzzing  Hornet coming at you....so they are not stealth ninja unlike my previous FPV V929 (i still like my old ninja quad).  Bigger quads like my DJI Phantom and APM 450 with rotor range 800~920KV low rpm with big blades are less noisier than a 250 size quad.  Plus they are fast flying missile for a tiny frame...caution.

 

 

Pros and Cons

Here are list of pros and cons about this platform. Some of this are needed to take seriously if you are going deep into long term FPV ambition on FPV250 size racer

fpv250 mw 3Pros:

  1. Small and portable. 
  2. Cheaper to build and more compatible after market parts support due to high demand trending and popularity.
  3. The Nylon plastic material frame of DIATONE FPV 250 held very well when crashing on concrete and pavement, arm slightly bend but live another day to fly so i highly recommends this frame for beginner and intermediate pilot.  My buddies who flew carbon fiber made 250mm frame smacked too bits and pieces after face plant on concrete..no hope to glue things back.
  4. Vendors/business owner make lots of profit selling 250 size multirotor parts because people crash a lot on these and customer will buy more to keep it flying.

Cons:

  1. fpv250 mw 31They are super fast multirotor, impact per-square inch if accidentally hit an object will be blown to bits.  They have high speed rotor, low drag, twitchy, high maneuverability, and tiny sturdy stuff is a rocket.
  2. Not a good long range FPV flying, need to shed some weight to get more lifting power.
  3. As said before the build is very compact, all vital electronics cramped together in a small space.  This causes electronic interference among each hardware especially magnetic interference emitted from power distribution board/BEC (if placed close below flight controller board) which can cause flight controller sensors such as Magnitude/Compass sensor to go awry and incorrectly navigate in IOC mode or fail RTH (Return To Home) Not much space for electronic interference separation.
  4. No time to relax your thumb stick.  Its all hands on and ready to rumble.
  5. Stock up lots of spare propellers even if you're an excellent pilot.
  6. Very bad L.O.S (Line Of Sight) flyer...too small to see your multirotor orientation, your hand all full on the controllers.



Current status & flight history

fpv250 mw 13Took me almost 3 weeks to get it to fly right due to PID setting on KK2.0 flight board. Also a transition to MultiWii Pro controller took me another  3 weeks too to get the right PID and GPS stuff to work. I had to call my buddy Mr. Voon to help me out and thanks to him save me 30% of overall effort to get the flight controller matched with 250mm platform. Building is routinely ok...but tuning is major pain in the ass to get it fly right on small frame.   When its all done its smooth sailing after that.    Flying is fun...its all about speed and the thrills going low and swooossssh! around trees, obstacles, field and other "Star Wars"  pod racing like maneuvers.  Handling are twitchy but its all on the pilot ability to thumb stick around and good eye to navigate through given path.  Unlike my bigger multirotor a 250mm size will keep me full thumbs on the stick.  40% stabilization controlled by  the flight controller and the remaining 60% is up for the pilot to keep it a float and stabilized all the way. My last build was running on MultiWii Pro flight controller has GPS capability that have position holding, auto return home and have some fancy UAV like capability stuff.....kinda too much for a small park racer you think?..but i did it for fun and out of curiosity.


Lifespan operation:
2 months
Maintenance priority check: Blade stress mark at the propeller root hub (Gemfan/Turnigy 3 blade 5x3)
Constant critical issue:  Unpredictable hovering sensitivity due to unmatched PID setup...cause crash and broken propeller blade.
Maintenance cost per-lifespan: Need more spare propeller blade.
Flight hours accumulated per-lifespan: 52 hours
Best L.O.S distance record: 500~650m
Est. distance covered per-lifespan: 82km (Odo)
Best height record: 200m
Best flight time record per-session: 7~10min (2200mah 3s 40c)
Activity status: 250 hardware transferred into DIY FPV-600 foamy frame

 

fpv250 mw 32 fpv250 mw 29
fpv250 mw 30 fpv250 mw 28

 

Summary

fpv250 mw 5Flying fast close to ground proximity is awesome especially around obstacles, however flying solo without your wingman or someone to tailgate will get very boring unless you find someone in your local to join your POD racing activity around the parks full of trees and obstacles.  FPV 250 is good for short range high speed thrills.  Budget wise in the market you can own a "Plug n Fly" package for under $190 provided you already have basic equipment on piloting side such as radio and video gear.  Do always remember to stock up more spare propellers regardless if you're excellent pilot or not because 250 platform can be very unpredictable at random time either because of dumb sticks or the trees jumping in front of you. But all i know PID setup on several flight controller is major or super pain in the ass the get it right because it  took soo much time to do it rather than spent time having fun flying.  I can see myself spending more money buying more props and fixes if i'm pushing my addiction further.. i don't see myself into racing yet because i'm more into aerial photography, scale plane cockpit flying and high flying stuff.  Oh btw i still have bunch of FPV V929 that does the right job zooming around tight spaces with zero maintenance for years. Would i dig 250 racing again?... I'm done with it! 
 

 fpv250 mw 20

 

Videos/Medias
MediasHere are some of my video and gallery related to the above topics:

 

 



 


 Shopping list

So you wanted to build a 250 size racer? You're in luck because the market now flooded with this size of multirotor which are now available widely around the world both at your quality hobby stores and online. Some comes as "Plug n Fly" kit version while other offer combo kit for your best hand pick selection.  Below are list what i found great to start your 250 size project.

  1. fpv250 mw 11250mm quadcopter/multirotor frame and compatibles:
  2. Radio set/combo (If you wanted to upgrade radio range/distance):
  3. Brushless motor:
  4. ESC (Electronic Speed Controller):
  5. Propellers:
  6. Main FPV piloting camera:
  7. Main FPV piloting camera with integrated HD recording (video output capable):
  8. Basic flight controller:
  9. Advance Flight controller/AP System (for advance and autopilot build)
  10. OSD module (On Screen Display):
  11. BEC:
  12. Video transmitter/combo:
  13. Video receiver/video goggle/LCD combo:
  14. Main battery:

 

Building threads/Referral/Support forum

If you don't know where to begin with i recommend you to start reading some guides, wikis and building tips from popular on-line resources as listed below.  You might find me hanging around some popular R/C and FPV forum below.

fpv250 mw 17