And the safety pilot can see this at 4.5 miles? God help us.Mike altham wrote:Hi
As Alan said they should be buddy linked and be in sight of the other pilot.
If you are running 2.4 on the transmitter and rx for the camera. You have to use 35 MHz radio as the 2.4 will swamp the radio 2.4 signal.
There is 5.8 ghz for camera and 433 UHF but this needs a HAM license to use in the Uk plus it is a military frequency I think.
FPV flying is not covered under Bmfa insurance. Little known to some FPVers that you have to get separate insurance which is £15 a year. This covers FPV Flying upto 5 million insurance.
I have one of these with all the gear. We have a FPV slot at our clubs so we know it will not affect anyone.
The 35 MHz will start losing signal at around a mile.
Some people on the forums have a normal 149 dp rx and add another 3 lengths of aerial onto the rx.
These have then been flown to around 4.5 miles away on standard 35 MHz
Ok if you are in the middle of nowhere but not in the area where other clubs are.
FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Must dig that olde control line model out of the attic. 

Last edited by Barry Bennett on March 2nd, 2011, 2:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
I was thinking of fitting a dual, super tripple 10,000mwatt tranmitter module to my 2.4ghz transmitter. Then I could kill any fpv that got too close 

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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
. . . . now you're talking ! ! nice one . . .
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Exactly, some on the internet even have spotters with binoculars
My theory is, if everyone is swapping to 2.4ghz then there will be less chance of getting shot down on 35mhz
2.4ghz will be in the Nimrod so hopefully it will be ok. I still dont trust it 100%. In 14 years I have not had any radio failure or interference on 35mhz touch wood
Mike.
My theory is, if everyone is swapping to 2.4ghz then there will be less chance of getting shot down on 35mhz

2.4ghz will be in the Nimrod so hopefully it will be ok. I still dont trust it 100%. In 14 years I have not had any radio failure or interference on 35mhz touch wood

Mike.
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
The chance of an incident is perhaps small, we should still be a little wary unless it can be properly shown not to be a problem. I shall not panic.
433Mhz. There is a very small allocation in the Band for Scientific and Medical use which is also used by vehicle access fobs. Amateur Radio "Hams" are not allowed to use Video Transmissions from an aircraft as has been suggested.
433Mhz. There is a very small allocation in the Band for Scientific and Medical use which is also used by vehicle access fobs. Amateur Radio "Hams" are not allowed to use Video Transmissions from an aircraft as has been suggested.
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Hi ,
433 mhz is used in different countries but not legal here in the UK.
There is a legal frequency of 459mhz that is allocated to model aircraft which the FPV cameras etc are going to from some manufacturers as they can get longer distances.
Air-to-ground line of sight and reliable transmission distance of up to 10000m(500mW); uses GFSK modulation mode.
Carrier frequency: 433 MHz can be used - this is an ISM band in many countries (not in the UK, Amateur Licence is required))
Alternatively by setting the unit to channels 9, 10 or 11 it will operate in the 459MHz band which is reserved for model control in the UK. (Amateur licence may still be required).
Provides 16 channels
Interface: TTL/RS232/485 by the user select (required custom);
Receiver sensitivity:-123dBm
Interface rate: 1200/2400/4800/9600/19200bps/38400bps
Channel rate: 1200/2400/4800/9600/19200bps/38400bps
Transceiver Conversion Time<20ms
Can be used for point to point, point to multipoint, multi-point to point communications and many other combinations
Transparent data transmission
Auto-filter out false data generated by the air, long-term reliability is good, very low failure
Mike.
433 mhz is used in different countries but not legal here in the UK.
There is a legal frequency of 459mhz that is allocated to model aircraft which the FPV cameras etc are going to from some manufacturers as they can get longer distances.
Air-to-ground line of sight and reliable transmission distance of up to 10000m(500mW); uses GFSK modulation mode.
Carrier frequency: 433 MHz can be used - this is an ISM band in many countries (not in the UK, Amateur Licence is required))
Alternatively by setting the unit to channels 9, 10 or 11 it will operate in the 459MHz band which is reserved for model control in the UK. (Amateur licence may still be required).
Provides 16 channels
Interface: TTL/RS232/485 by the user select (required custom);
Receiver sensitivity:-123dBm
Interface rate: 1200/2400/4800/9600/19200bps/38400bps
Channel rate: 1200/2400/4800/9600/19200bps/38400bps
Transceiver Conversion Time<20ms
Can be used for point to point, point to multipoint, multi-point to point communications and many other combinations
Transparent data transmission
Auto-filter out false data generated by the air, long-term reliability is good, very low failure
Mike.
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
. . . . . . Eh ? . . . .
- Dave Parry
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Glenn Masters wrote:. . . . . . Eh ? . . . .
Exactly Glen, just what I was thinking.
- Denis Brown
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Dave Parry wrote:Glenn Masters wrote:. . . . . . Eh ? . . . .
Exactly Glen, just what I was thinking.
Think I might go back to my Hornby train set


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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bmw6KPrpuCI
found this on you tube comments sum it up and the one at the end of the video
found this on you tube comments sum it up and the one at the end of the video
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
adrian west wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bmw6KPrpuCI
found this on you tube comments sum it up and the one at the end of the video
Yep, typical illiterate attitude- 'they was stuck in the past and wouldnt let me fly'.
- Denis Brown
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Well I have watched that video and one or two others and I find it quite boring. Am I missing out on something?
Sooner watch Andy Wynns grass chopping Mustang at close hand
Sooner watch Andy Wynns grass chopping Mustang at close hand

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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
At last years Elvington, DSM2 models were dropping left right and centre. We thought it was to do with the large aerial at the airfield occasionally transmitting at high amplitude and knocking out our signals if we were unlucky. It hit me twice and hit others using DSM2. Any model on DSMX or other frequency hopping 2.4 were fine.
Now 35Mhz is banned, I wonder how long it is before non-frequency hopping transmitters are banned? DSM2 is fine just around other 2.4 transmitters, but illegal FPV and (I'm assuming legal) airfield equipment can swamp them. Worst part is they don't even go into failsafe in this situation (neither of mine did, yet they both passed ground tests)
DSM2 test: http://youtu.be/Vy7Gg6Tj57Q?t=2m39s
Now 35Mhz is banned, I wonder how long it is before non-frequency hopping transmitters are banned? DSM2 is fine just around other 2.4 transmitters, but illegal FPV and (I'm assuming legal) airfield equipment can swamp them. Worst part is they don't even go into failsafe in this situation (neither of mine did, yet they both passed ground tests)

DSM2 test: http://youtu.be/Vy7Gg6Tj57Q?t=2m39s
- Rob Buckley
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Sam,
If you (and others) were having such serious sounding radio problems at a public show, did you formally report it to the LMA (ie me)?
Rob
If you (and others) were having such serious sounding radio problems at a public show, did you formally report it to the LMA (ie me)?
Rob
LMA Secretary - I've got a reasonable idea where you live!
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Nope, didn't think to report it then but if you want a formal report I could give you one with all the details.
Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
Sam Boylett wrote:At last years Elvington, DSM2 models were dropping left right and centre. We thought it was to do with the large aerial at the airfield occasionally transmitting at high amplitude and knocking out our signals if we were unlucky. It hit me twice and hit others using DSM2. Any model on DSMX or other frequency hopping 2.4 were fine.
Now 35Mhz is banned, I wonder how long it is before non-frequency hopping transmitters are banned? DSM2 is fine just around other 2.4 transmitters, but illegal FPV and (I'm assuming legal) airfield equipment can swamp them. Worst part is they don't even go into failsafe in this situation (neither of mine did, yet they both passed ground tests)
DSM2 test: http://youtu.be/Vy7Gg6Tj57Q?t=2m39s
Interesting!
And I am NOT taking the wee wee.
Bonzey
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
I am at a loss what to think here. Models were 'dropping left, right and centre' and yet nobody brought this to the attention of the LMA in any way? The flight line crew did not query or investigate these 'crashes'? Are you avin a laff?Sam Boylett wrote:At last years Elvington, DSM2 models were dropping left right and centre. We thought it was to do with the large aerial at the airfield occasionally transmitting at high amplitude and knocking out our signals if we were unlucky. It hit me twice and hit others using DSM2. Any model on DSMX or other frequency hopping 2.4 were fine.

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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
and why has it taken nearly 12months to mention the problem, If there is one!
I flew on spectrum dsmx with no problems, Abit more expensive than dsm2 but worth the extra £20
I flew on spectrum dsmx with no problems, Abit more expensive than dsm2 but worth the extra £20
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Re: FPV Interference on 2.4Ghz
'didnt think to report it' seems a very odd thing, and as Paul said, its a long time ago- care to elaborate?
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