1: If we buy two or three air-units for each Controller - how is the experience of flying those three (one at a time) ? - is any re-linking/re-pairing needed or will it just work with the first airunit that is on?
2: Does the Air-unit ethernet connector provide full connectivity over alternative link, like 5G or other communication methots? - and can the controller unit utilise connection from it’s 5.8Ghz Wifi ? In other words: can Herelink devices be used with starlink/5G ?(even if that means the routing/VPN has to be established outside the Herelink devices.)
Please describe possibilities if this is possible.
3: What is the IP-rating of the Controller
4: what is the operating temperature of the controller.
5: are the joysticks potentiometers or hall-effect sensors?
6: what is the expected/typical Controller operating time on full charge, in about 0°C at full brightness? (running QGC)
7: can the RF power (FCC/CE) mode be freely selected?
Yes, I did see that, and failed to find answers to the questions above. The contents are not really searchable as the search results are not limited to the product I look at.
Is there maybe a support mail can use?
I only answer for what i’m sure, so
1 : One Ground unit can only be paired with one Air Unit, or one Air unit with one air unit. Ratio is 1 to 1
3 : Controller is not waterproof if it was the question.
5 : Hall effect
6 : Clients that use it a lot reported around 4-5 hours. Those that have to use it all day long had to connect a power bank on USB to keeps it live.
7 : You can choose your region easily from the menu, it change the power output in consequence
Thank you, I was not really looking for “waterproof” , but that it could handle some rain/snow/drizzle, preferably with no direct way from joystick/buttons to electronics. and IP rating could also give me a clue on the chance that the capacitive touchdisplay had some option to lock/reduce sensitivity when there is light rain.
it would accept some droplets but it is defenitly not made for hard weathers. You can also use this kind of housing to make it all weathers, and keep your hands warmer during winter.
We used to use similar sleeves for normal RC transmitters, but unless well heated, they just fog up on the inside.
Recently we switched to thin, heated gloves - which works well.
I think the biggest downside to choosing this system now is the inability to link up with more than one air unit - and the unclear routing capabilities.