Sunday, May 6, 2012

Turnigy Talon V2 Build: Part 1

The tricopter I built last year has been sitting gathering dust- it never flew well enough for me to have any fun with it. I've been watching the prices on the KK board clones drop in price, and when I noticed that Hobbyking released a new carbon fiber quadcopter frame I had to pull the trigger and give it a try again.

I'm re-using the 18A ESC's, receiver, and some other bits from the Tricopter. Otherwise it's a fresh build.

Component Qty
Turnigy Talon V2 Quadcopter Frame 1
Hobbyking multi-rotor control board v2.1 1
Quad-rotor power distribution board 1
Turnigy L2215J-900 Brushless Motor (200w) 4
Hobbyking SS series 18-20A ESC 4

 THe L2215 900kv motors are a bit of an unknown- Hobbyking was out of stock of pretty much everything else. The L2215's fit, but the bolt pattern only allows two screws instead of the normal four to attach them to the arms. Also, it would be better to have a motor that has mounting holes on the side of the motor that shaft protrudes from to allow the motor to be below the mounting arm. You could push the shaft through on these motors, but to do so you need to loosen some tiny allen screws- which when I tried, seemed like they really wanted to strip the heads. So I left well enough alone and mounted them without moving the shafts.

Nice packaging.

Assembled frame without electronics

Quick review- the frame seems very nicely done. The aluminum bits are nicely machined and anodized, and the quality of the carbon fiber seems good. I did have to drill out a few of the holes on the flat carbon plates which form the center hub of the 'copter.

One of the sweet things about this copter design, is that you can run the motor wires through the inside of the carbon arms. To do so, the motor leads need to be long enough- I found that they should be about 10 inches total from the tip of the wire connector to the side of the ESC body. This provides enough length to allow the wires to be loaded through the tube during assembly and plugged into the motor connectors.

In order to add length to the ESC motor leads, you need to join wire extensions to the ESC. I used an overlapping butt joint. I also used 14 gage wire, overkill for this application, but it's what I had available. Going with some 16 or 18 gage wire would save some weight.

Applying flux to end of wire
ESC lead inserted into center of wire
Once the ESC lead is inserted into the wire, I applied head with a soldering iron and wicked solder into the joint. I finished it off with some heat shrink. Again, it's best to slide the heat shrink over the wire before you add the connectors- it makes assembly much easier.


ESC with added cable  length
I re-used the ESCs from my old tricopter, which is why there is multiple wire joints shown in the photo above.

If you are using new ESC's, you'll want to hold off on adding the battery connector to the ESC.


Wires threaded through carbon rod
Motor mount, wires ready to go

All four arms with wires.

The pre-cut holes in the bottom carbon fiber plate are just the right size to allow feeding the ESC and wire harness through. This will allow mounting the ESC's to the edge of the 'copter hub later.

Mess 'o wires
The Turnigy Talon V2 kit came with some nylon posts, nuts, and screws to mount the control board on top of the hub. However, I couldn't figure out how to use that hardware to also mount the Hobbyking power distribution board. The power power is exactly the same size and has the same mounting holes as the control board. The option I'm going to try first is just to use some 4/40 x 1" long screws and appropriate nuts, spacers, and servo grommets.

4/40 x 1" screws inserted from the bottom of the carbon plate

After I inserted the screws from the bottom, I fixed them in place with two nuts per screw tightened against themselves. I then used some aluminum spacers to give enough room between the carbon plate and the power board. I think these spacers were landing gear wheel spacers from my defunct Parkzone T-28. Always part out those crashed planes and keep the misc. hardware!

Power distribution board installed
After the power distribution board is in place, the rubber servo grommets can be placed on the screws. The grommets will provide some vibration damping for the control board. Less vibration = more accurate control and less error from the piezo gyros.


Control board stacked
The 1" 4/40 screws are just long enough to put another set of grommets on top of the control board and fasten everything down with a single 4/40 nut. I might try re-doing the stack with a shorter spacer on the bottom, to allow a double-nut or locknut to be used on top. I'm worried the nuts might loosen or fall off in flight, causing a big problem. 

Stacked boards- side view

Test Assembly

Zoom view of the stack
Now the trick- how to wrangle all of the ESC's, power cables, and ESC control  cables into something resembling order. It looks like the ESCs could be zip-tied to the corners of the hub. Two possible orientations present themselves- horizontal:


Horizontal

Vertical
Vertical made more sense to me- it seemed to allow for better fit of the various wires. 

Since my ESC's already had EC3 battery connectors soldered on, I had to make some short adapter harnesses. The Hobbyking power distribution board had 3.5mm female sockets soldered on. If I was using brand new ESC's I would have simply soldered 3.5mm male connectors onto the ESC's and directly plugged them into the board. That would have made for a neater and lighter installation. Also, fewer connectors = less possible failed joints. If I really like how this flies I might clean things up a bit. I'd also replace all of the 14 gage wire with lighter 16 or 18 gage.

ESC's all plugged in.

 Next steps:
  1. building battery mount
  2. hooking up control board
  3. prop & motor setup
  4. Fly!
 Once it's proven to fly, I'm hoping to use this for a number of things:
  • airborne photography
  • FPV? 
  • stringing Christmas lights in tall trees?

12 comments:

  1. Very nice - this looks like a great quad frame...

    Thanks for sharing!

    -Steve
    http://www.ilovefpv.com

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  2. HI , I'm thinking of building the same. I'm brand new at these. I’d also like to add a GoPro to it. I presume the frame will take the weight, but what motors would I need and which battery? To fix it to the frame, do I simply buy an extra plate and I guess some spacers? Thanks Tim

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  3. Tim,

    If you look at the top of my post, you can see exactly what motors I used. They would be plenty powerful enough to lift a go-pro. I'm using a 2200 mAh 3 cell LIPO battery. You'd probably have to build some sort of mount, I'd start with some 1/8" aircraft plywood or other lightweight, strong material to rig something up. Just be sure to get your center of gravity right- you'll probably have to mount your go-pro on one side of the frame and the battery on the other to get it to balance right. Good luck!

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  4. Thanks Andrew. Sorry, I missed the info at the top of your post. Got it. Thanks also for the advice on the mount. I'll look into it,
    Regards
    Tim

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  5. Based on your build what kind of flight time do you expect?

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  6. I've been getting flights from between 7-10 minutes on a 3s 2200. No acrobatics- basically just flying around the yard.

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  7. Hi Andrew,

    I'm a bit confused about how everything is connected. Where do the R/C receiver and the flight control board draw their power from?

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    Replies
    1. The flight control (FC) board draws its power through the electronic speed controls' (ESCs) control leads. The ESC leads have three wires- +, -, and signal. Normally this lead is plugged straight into the RX (powering it), but for multi-copters it is plugged into the FC. Some people clip the + lead in all but one of the ESC leads. I haven't had any issues not clipping the extra power leads so I don't do it. The RX then draws its power from the FC.

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  8. After reviewing this I have a question. When you mounted your Dist Board and KK2 board, you did so with front being one of the arms rather than between 2 arms. How does that affect the KK2's boards idea of where front is?

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    Replies
    1. You can set up the firmware to adjust flying in "X" or "+" mode.

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  9. Andrew,
    I am building off of the same Talon platform as you, I am using a Qbrain ESC, and a Multi Wii 2.3 Nav. GUI FCS... How would I hook up the rotors, (which are Tri Rotors) to be sinked properly? LF, LB, RF, RB???

    Thank you for your reply.

    Carl

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    Replies
    1. Carl,

      You'll want to look through the documentation for the MultiWii flight controller to see which prop goes where / the direction of rotation of each rotor. Usually the documentation says which rotor is clockwise (CW) and which are counterclockwise (CCW). Once you know which rotors are CW and CCW, you can figure out which prop goes where.

      Good luck!

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