RF Drone Real

boniangel

New member
¿Para cuando un RF exclusivo para Drones?.
todas kas versiones que veo tienen como mucho 4/6 drones y el resto son aviones y demás... El RF Drone ya está descatalogado y es imposible de comprar, aunque no se si este es exclusivo para drones o sigue ls misma estela que los demas

Yo tengo el RF 7.5 y tiene solo 4 drones, que además son difíciles de controlar y estabilizar (imposible ajustar 100% con interlink) y se echan de menos escenarios urbanos para entrenamientos más reales...
¿alguna sugerencia a parte del simulador DJI que aunque es muy real consume una barbaridad de recursos y es mas exclusivo de emisoras Dji?
 
translated via Google Translate app 😊:

For when an exclusive RF for Drones?
all the versions that I see have at most 4/6 drones and the rest are planes and others... The RF Drone is already discontinued and it is impossible to buy, although I don't know if this is exclusive to drones or follows the same trail as the the rest

I have the RF 7.5 and it has only 4 drones, which are also difficult to control and stabilize (impossible to adjust 100% with interlink) and urban scenarios for more real training are missed...
Any suggestion apart from the DJI simulator that, although it is very real, consumes a lot of resources and is more exclusive to Dji stations?
 
..la verdad es que me extraña que en estos tiempos no haya un software especifico al igual que tiene Dji...a ver si alguien se anima y lo reivindica también o arroja luz sobre esta cuestión. Gracias
 
You should really upgrade to RF 9.5, if you want to fly drones. The "Quadcopter X" is clearly meant to represent the DJI Phantom without actually being one, and there are bunch of other quadcopters and helicopters in the simulator.

You can also build and edit your own maps... if you really want maps with custom scenarios, races, or obstacle courses, it is fairly easy to create them, using the tools that come with the software.
 
I have little experience, trying to learn quads.
Using RF Evo and InterLink DX. No drone training packs available?
 
@Lewis_0428, no, there are no Training lessons covering drones. There are a few drone Challenges that you may enjoy and which can help you improve your skills as you learn.
  • Quadcopter Trials: Fly a quadcopter akin to the well-known DJI Phantom through various obstacle courses. You as the pilot are on the ground looking at your model and actually walk around (automatically) to follow it through the levels.
  • FPV Drone Racing: As the name implies, you pilot a smaller, more agile race drone using an FPV (first-person view) camera mounted on the drone. Fly it through a series of gates in various layouts.
  • FPV Race League: Similar to the FPV Drone Racing I & II challenges, but more closely matches a real-world club-style event. (Accessing this challenge requires first earning a medal in FPV Drone Racing I.)
One thing to be aware of is that different types of multirotors fly very differently from each other. For example, a quadcopter designed as a stable camera platform will have very different flight characteristics and even different flight modes than a quadcopter designed for FPV racing, even though they are both quads.

Further, drone technology--particularly flight controllers--changed very rapidly in that space during its heydey. That was particularly true of racing drones, where the bleeding edge state of the art one month could be woefully outdated only a few short months later. The drone models in RealFlight are quite accurate representations of the specific models/technologies they simulate, but they capture moments in time.

By model count there is less of a focus on racing drones in RealFlight. We did create a Race Drone Flight Controller component toward the end of our development work on drones to more closely simulate the requirements of popular racing drones. The Rise RXS255 is the only stock model using it. Again, it was accurate for its time, but is probably a bit out of date now.

You can still learn a lot simply by getting in there and flying the different types of multirotors.

Do pay attention to the Flight Modes gadget. It will provide essential info about which flight modes the given model has and which mode is currently active. That makes all the difference in how they fly. You can mouse over the '?' icon to learn more about how each mode works.
 
@Lewis_0428, no, there are no Training lessons covering drones. There are a few drone Challenges that you may enjoy and which can help you improve your skills as you learn.
  • Quadcopter Trials: Fly a quadcopter akin to the well-known DJI Phantom through various obstacle courses. You as the pilot are on the ground looking at your model and actually walk around (automatically) to follow it through the levels.
  • FPV Drone Racing: As the name implies, you pilot a smaller, more agile race drone using an FPV (first-person view) camera mounted on the drone. Fly it through a series of gates in various layouts.
  • FPV Race League: Similar to the FPV Drone Racing I & II challenges, but more closely matches a real-world club-style event. (Accessing this challenge requires first earning a medal in FPV Drone Racing I.)
One thing to be aware of is that different types of multirotors fly very differently from each other. For example, a quadcopter designed as a stable camera platform will have very different flight characteristics and even different flight modes than a quadcopter designed for FPV racing, even though they are both quads.

Further, drone technology--particularly flight controllers--changed very rapidly in that space during its heydey. That was particularly true of racing drones, where the bleeding edge state of the art one month could be woefully outdated only a few short months later. The drone models in RealFlight are quite accurate representations of the specific models/technologies they simulate, but they capture moments in time.

By model count there is less of a focus on racing drones in RealFlight. We did create a Race Drone Flight Controller component toward the end of our development work on drones to more closely simulate the requirements of popular racing drones. The Rise RXS255 is the only stock model using it. Again, it was accurate for its time, but is probably a bit out of date now.

You can still learn a lot simply by getting in there and flying the different types of multirotors.

Do pay attention to the Flight Modes gadget. It will provide essential info about which flight modes the given model has and which mode is currently active. That makes all the difference in how they fly. You can mouse over the '?' icon to learn more about how each mode works.
Many thanks for your very informative reply. As far as each model flying very differently, all I can say is, "boy howdy!" I'm grateful for the opportunity to try so many different kinds of RC aircraft without having to pay crash damages.
 
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