Hi christianbeccy
Let me start my saying that I am a complete novice at this rc heli business, which is an important context to begin with and apologies in advance for a long reply.
Following advice from my local hobby shop + all the gurus on this forum, whose advice is consistent across the board (!), I went and got a CX2 (and now have Phoenix sim) and its the best advice I have ever taken!
I have already bounced my heli off of beanbags, sofas, skirtingboards and tables. I have had to replace blades and inner/outer shafts, which is great because I have learnt lots about how its put together...which generally means I can learn how to fix any negative idiosyncrasy with it, but means I have spent few £s rather than many per crash.
In 15-20 flights I can now hover and traverse my living room (available space is about 12' by 10', avoiding obstacles etc). Having bought Phoenix to learn nose-in and do stuff while my lipos charge I have come to the following realisation...
If you think you are competent with the controls/orientation of a heli, invest in Phoenix for £80 to test how competent you really are. It'll likely demonstrate just how many £000's a cheap "proper" heli would have cost.
I can't stress enough how good the advice is on this forum, from guys who must have literally haemorraged £s to get the experience and knowledge they now have. I know I'm grateful!
Finally, its a consistent view amongst this forums frequenters that Walkera helis are manure, again from experience I am sure so...take heed
best regards (for you and your wallet)
Brewber
Let me start my saying that I am a complete novice at this rc heli business, which is an important context to begin with and apologies in advance for a long reply.
Following advice from my local hobby shop + all the gurus on this forum, whose advice is consistent across the board (!), I went and got a CX2 (and now have Phoenix sim) and its the best advice I have ever taken!
I have already bounced my heli off of beanbags, sofas, skirtingboards and tables. I have had to replace blades and inner/outer shafts, which is great because I have learnt lots about how its put together...which generally means I can learn how to fix any negative idiosyncrasy with it, but means I have spent few £s rather than many per crash.
In 15-20 flights I can now hover and traverse my living room (available space is about 12' by 10', avoiding obstacles etc). Having bought Phoenix to learn nose-in and do stuff while my lipos charge I have come to the following realisation...
If you think you are competent with the controls/orientation of a heli, invest in Phoenix for £80 to test how competent you really are. It'll likely demonstrate just how many £000's a cheap "proper" heli would have cost.
I can't stress enough how good the advice is on this forum, from guys who must have literally haemorraged £s to get the experience and knowledge they now have. I know I'm grateful!
Finally, its a consistent view amongst this forums frequenters that Walkera helis are manure, again from experience I am sure so...take heed

best regards (for you and your wallet)
Brewber
Originally posted by christianbeccy
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Just been flying backwards circuits around the kitchen.




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