A couple of tips about
buying your first rc chopper:
The smaller, the
safer (and cheaper) the chopper will be.
You are also more likely to use and enjoy the RC Helicopter if you
don't have to go outside every time you want to use it. The small ones
can be used indoors, but the larger ones become very hard to use inside
as they will keep crashing into stuff and the ceiling. The larger ones
also hurt if they crash into you, your pet or family member. Friends
can hurt too :(
So get a small chopper if its your first one so that you don't hurt
anything other than your ego with frequent "learning crashes" at
least till you can get good enough to brag to your buddies that you
really know how to "fly a remote-controlled helicopter"
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Forget
trying to get one large enough to put a camera on.
This is an amature mistake. If you want to get seriously into flying
and want to have a flying camera, then google it and you can buy one
for a few grand. But first you need to learn to fly a simple chopper,
so stay focused.
Also for video or photographying from the sky, you want an RC Sailplane
with a motor that shuts off so that you don't have the noise and
vibrations, and its way cheaper of an option.
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You
can save alot of money on a RC Chopper by NOT getting one with a swash
plate:
Swashplates are the essence of what made helicopters possible, but they
are not really needed for an RC Helicopter that you plan to fly around
your office or apartment for fun, in fact they cause more problems. The
reason is that the average user will over compensate when the chopper
gets wobily and exaserbate the problem. When you are first learning to
fly, stability is the key, and a swash plate makes it easier to go out
of control.
If you are an intermediate user, then a swash plated chopper might make
sense, because then it will go the direction you want it to. With a
swash plateless micro chopper, you have limited control of the
less/more nature, but that is about it. So if you start getting to
close to the wall, you can do the opposite of what you where doing to
further the trusty RC Chopper from the wall, but you can't make it go
left or right so easily.
An additional problems with RC helicopters with swash plates is that
when you manuever in a any direction, the craft will fall a bit,
causing you to give it more lift and then reducing it again when it
levels out. This takes a while to learn and will crash a bit at the
begining, Its best you get the hang of controling the elevation with
the throttle before you need to also balance the swash plate.
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Go
to a hobby store and not a toy store.
RC hobby stores have a better selection and will also probably have
slightly better quality for price. Tell them this is your first chopper
and that you want to learn how to fly a bit before you guy one of the
big ones.
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You
will need the low cost chopper even when you get a big one, one day:
Whenever you have a chopper out around other people,
someone is going to want to fly it.
Rather than give them the remote for a $500-$1,000 helicopter that they
might crash, break, and feel really bad about, you can give them the
easy one to play around with so that they see its not that easy. After
crashing the easy one a few times (without it breaking, I might add) -
they will no longer want to fly the big one, trust me on this one :)
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