First up is a picture of me with the quadcopter in its current state. Keep reading to see how I got to here from just an idea
Project Start: (August) Here is the original quadcopter, in its simplest, cheapest and messiest form. I had spent a good chunk of time in July reading and learning about quadcopters, and by August I felt ready to take off on my own.
By October I had made some significant improvements. The biggest improvement was that it now had a gopro camera with live streaming video sent to a briefcase ground station I made. It was possible to fly the quad copter by only looking at the video feed, which is good for about a mile. Other improvements consisted of, landing gear, LEDs, 3d printed motor mounts, vibration damping and much more. It had also weathered several major crashes and one full rebuild at this point.
With November and December came significant improvements; A carbon fiber frame, a camera gimbal (stabilization system), and a Pelican transportation case. The carbon fiber frame forced me to rebuild the quad and tidy the wires up, while the gimbal gave me smooth level footage regardless of the quadcopters tilt. The pelican case has also been immensely useful for transportation especially in the snow!
My next addition is already in the mail. A dedicated camera that will be directly mounted to the quad copter so that I can use my briefcase ground station to fly the quad. The current camera is stabilized so you cant tell how the quad copter is tilted, which is certainly an important thing to know as the pilot. The camera should be mounted and working by the end of this week. Exciting! (Update: Camera is wired in and working, and had my first few flights with it. I did some aerial photography with the GoPro while I was flying with the flight cam (also did some crashing). Here is the new camera and some photos I took with the GoPro. Not a very interesting subject matter, but it was a test run, and the aerial photos came back great.













"Neat Copter!" -Clare Reynders
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