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Thread: Would this transmitter and receiver be suitable for an antweight?

  1. #1
    https://hobbyking.com/en_us/fpv-race...e-2-black.html

    ^ the product in question

    This transmitter looks far more comfortable to hold than the standard chunky controllers I see, however the product description says it's designed for drones. Would this be an issue?

    The receiver only weighs ~7g, so the weight should be fine for an antweight I'm assuming.

  2. #2
    Ocracoke's Avatar
    Team Kaizen

    The transmitter looks fine to me (noting that the protocol is AFHDS rather than DSMX which is something to bear in mind if you were looking for a different receiver), seems to be within the rules and the weight for the receiver should be OK for an Antweight.
    Team Kaizen - Build Diary for all the robots

    AW: Amai, Ikari, Lafiel, Osu, Ramu
    BW: Shu!, The Honey Badger
    FW: Azriel
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  3. #3

  4. #4
    Ocracoke's Avatar
    Team Kaizen

    Yeah, the protocols need to match. I don't know about the AFHDS protocol and wherever there is any special requirements but in the case of the LemonRX, it would not work as that is a DSMX/DSM2 receiver.
    Team Kaizen - Build Diary for all the robots

    AW: Amai, Ikari, Lafiel, Osu, Ramu
    BW: Shu!, The Honey Badger
    FW: Azriel
    MW: Jibril, Kaizen

  5. #5
    I've got a FlySky FS-iA6 tx (enormous!) that uses AFHDS, and I used it in one of my ants. It seems fine, and you can get a fairly small 4-channel rx for it.

    It has a small amount of telemetry, showing rx voltage, which you can apparently hack a bit to get battery voltage. Never tried it, tho - I don't like the idea of battery voltage going anywhere near the rx. :P

  6. #6
    I use AFHDS2A in all my bots: FS-i6 & FS-i6X transmitters; 0.9g 4 channel receivers from banggood - they have been great so far!

    https://www.banggood.com/Flysky-FS2A...r_warehouse=CN

    They can be powered from 3.3-10V which is very handy (2s). Also a bind button rather than having to use a bind plug.

    The only reason I use AFHDS (2A) stuff is because I got my first transmitter and receiver as a prize with a quadcopter, so there was no point getting different stuff if it worked fine.

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by SergeantQuack View Post
    They can be powered from 3.3-10V which is very handy (2s). Also a bind button rather than having to use a bind plug.
    I never noticed the voltage range. Handy! The bind button is also handy, but don't do what I did and heat-shrink it before binding. :P

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