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  • HBFP or other as 1st helicopter

    Hi,

    A few weeks back I bought myself a toy coaxial mini helicopter and have had so much fun that a little bit of wee came out and now I think I should progress on to a proper one.

    I have done a fair about of reading and it seems the Honey Bee FP would be a good starter for me. It will be cheaper to repair than a CP and more involved than a coaxial which I think I would tire of very quickly.

    Am I missing any other excellent starter helicopters that would give me a good grounding in this hobby?

    thanks,

    Hedley
    mSR
    120 SR
    Trex 450
    Easystar
    Jumper 25
    Thunder Tiger DT10

  • #2
    Eflight blade msr or blade 120 is the one for you mate
    Sab Goblin 500

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    • #3
      Blade 120 SR Review - As Good As The mSR?
      Sab Goblin 500

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      • #4
        Yeah I would I go with a Blade mSR or a Blade SR... or a Blade 120 SR
        Last edited by Dannyyy; 01-09-2010, 03:49 PM.
        I left the hobby 3 years ago and discovered Women.

        I wish I never left.

        Comment


        • #5
          Thanks for the very quick replies. I know this will be the forum to stick with so when I plough the thing into the ground I can get advice on rebuilding.

          Just out of interest, what do the Blades have that make them a better option that the HBFP?

          thanks.
          mSR
          120 SR
          Trex 450
          Easystar
          Jumper 25
          Thunder Tiger DT10

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Madcowz View Post
            Thanks for the very quick replies. I know this will be the forum to stick with so when I plough the thing into the ground I can get advice on rebuilding.

            Just out of interest, what do the Blades have that make them a better option that the HBFP?

            thanks.
            Cheaper, Smaller, easy to learn on, good quality parts, cheap spares and easy to get spares

            ohhh, and really good fun to buzz around the house
            I left the hobby 3 years ago and discovered Women.

            I wish I never left.

            Comment


            • #7
              Ah, I see, just one or two reasons then!

              I take it is complicated enough to last me a while? I'm looking for something that I can learn on properly and will be a good grounding for a CP later down the line. Hence why I am not bothering with a coaxial one.
              Last edited by Madcowz; 01-09-2010, 04:19 PM.
              mSR
              120 SR
              Trex 450
              Easystar
              Jumper 25
              Thunder Tiger DT10

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Madcowz View Post
                Ah, I see, just one or two reasons then!

                I take it is complicated enough to last me a while? I'm looking for something that I can learn on properly and will be a good grounding for a CP later down the line. Hence why I am not bothering with a coaxial one.
                No its not that complicated if you read the instructions, Simple's
                I left the hobby 3 years ago and discovered Women.

                I wish I never left.

                Comment


                • #9
                  I wouldn't bother with the SR, the 120 SR defo, the tail motor on the SR won't last you that long and on that size heli is vague to say the least.
                  Go 120 Sr, you know you want to
                  Sab Goblin 500

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                  • #10
                    Either the mSR or SR 120 would work better than a HBFP. The mSR is great for durability and for learning the basics indoors. After that, well Blade 400, Trex 500 etc.....
                    Mike
                    TRex 600NSP, OS55, MicroBeast
                    TRex 500ESP
                    TRex 450Sport,TT, Scorpion 2221/8,
                    Futaba 14SG Optifuel 20%
                    Member RCHA BMFA BMAC BALPA BARC

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                    • #11
                      I'm going to go against everyone else, and say HBFP (V2)

                      I have an mSR myself, and it's too easy to fly compared to the HBFP.

                      That said, the mSR can't be beat in a confined space like a normal living room.
                      Current fleet: Goblin Thunder Sport (700), Trex 700L, Logo 600, Specter 700, Henseleit TDR, V-Baaa control.
                      Next heli: I have pretty much everything I want. Maybe I'll upgrade some electronics or something.

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                      • #12
                        I really am confuzzled now!

                        So far I have the following recommendations: A Blade mSR, Blade 120 SR, Blade SR and the HBFP.

                        Having spoken to a friend who flies helis (still a newbie) he also instantly recommended the Blades so I think this is the range to go for, that and my local (ish) shop stocks the spares.

                        However, I have little idea as to what the differences are and what I should choose:

                        I have a small house but a large garden and a huge field next door so I can fly outside a lot without any travel. I am after something that will be a challenge but won't have me weeping into a plastic bag full of indistinguishable parts and an empty bank balence every couple of days.

                        I see that the mSR and the 120 SR are both FP whereas the SR is CP and therefore hardy to fly and more expensive to fix?

                        Blade mSR: FP (length: 7.5 in)
                        Blade 120 SR: FP (length: 12.5 in) - larger version of the mSR
                        Blade SR: CP (length: 19.1 in) - collective Pitch version

                        Ok.. the mSR is small and light so less damage in a crash but no use outside. The 120 SR is bigger and better able to handle light winds. The SR is a collective pitch heli and bigger, harder and more expensive to fix?

                        Just to add to all of this, my friend says he has a spare radio so I could go down the BNF route rather than the RTF.

                        Can anyone advise further please? I am close to purchasing but want to make sure I buy the right one first time round.

                        thanks.
                        mSR
                        120 SR
                        Trex 450
                        Easystar
                        Jumper 25
                        Thunder Tiger DT10

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          The blade SR and SR 120 to me are somewhat similar to coaxials as they tend to self stabilise. Whilst you can learn a great deal from them you seem to be looking for an outside heli and neither the SR or SR 120 are realistically outdoor heli's except on the calmest of days.....which in this country is pretty rare.

                          I'd personally go Blade SR. To give you an example I'm posting two videos, the first is my son on his first flight of the Blade SR after only ever flying coaxials. The second is myself and Richie Clark showing how far you can push an SR should you be that crazy.

                          [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUsSzxAmJCQ]YouTube - Andrew flies the Blade SR for the first time[/ame]

                          [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_r7TfOq98k]YouTube - Ash & Richie 3D the Blade SR[/ame]
                          Sponsored by CSM, Optifuel


                          Your RC Heli World

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                          • #14
                            Here's two overview videos I put together so you can see the difference between them and what you get .....

                            E-Flite Blade SR Overview

                            Blade MSR Overview & Upgrade
                            Sponsored by CSM, Optifuel


                            Your RC Heli World

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                            • #15
                              It kind of frustrates me that so many people dismiss the HBFP. Whether it is the Esky name I don't know but it is the most popular starter heli with good reason. Cheap as chips, flies very nicely, cheap to repair and very robust. Very busy HBFP communities online. Especially over on Helifreak. I do like Eflite stuff and the MSR is a great indoor heli though I don't like self stabilising nature of some of their helis.
                              Gaui 425 to build | Thunder Tiger Mini Titan E325 | Trex 250 | Gaui Mini Zoom | Brushless HBFP V1 with V2 frame EFlite Blade MSR | Walkera 4/3B | Walkera CB100

                              Citizen Smith

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