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In this post, I will detail the results of adding a second 5200mah LiPo battery in parallel with the standard Solo 5200mah battery. This effectively doubled the fuel capacity, but also increased the weight by 430 grams. The battery is a Hobby King multistart 5200mah 10C battery, so basically the lightest weight battery you can get.
Standard single solo battery flight times:
10% RTH kicks in at 16 minutes
6% (13.6 volts) manual landing at 17.5 minutes.
With second 5200mah battery strapped to the belly:
10% RTH kicked in at 19.5 minutes
6% (13.6 volts) manual landing at 21 minutes
The net gain was only 3.5 minutes, for a useful mission time of 19 minutes. I was expecting more like 23-25 minutes based on some rough math and ecalc data. So these results are disappointing to me. I would imagine larger props might add a minute. But regardless, nothing remotely close to being worthwhile. This motor and prop combination just can't efficiently lift that kind of weight. In my opinion, this is not worth the effort and complexity. I probably will not continue to use this.
** This could also be why 3DR is not bothering with a higher capacity battery ** You have to figure a larger battery from 3DR would be even less capacity than what I just tested. Maybe 8000mah or so? Certainly not double the capacity, as it would never fit. Meaning the increased flight time would probably be less or the same as what I got. There is very little to be gained by selling an enhanced battery that only gets you 2-3 minutes. I wouldn't pay extra for that.
However, what I will do is use this XT60 connection as a GPU. I can power the solo off a power supply on the table now rather than wasting batteries.
Power wires soldered to the main power connector inside the solo.
XT60 hanging out the back for the LiPo battery to plug into.
Bonus points if you can guess why this position didn't work. It took me a few minutes to realize that I'm an idiot.
Battery strapped to the belly, where it can actually function
Without the solo battery, the solo has no power information at all. It's being powered only by the auxiliary LiPo. So without the Solo smart battery, it reports 0 volts, and -1 amps due to the logic failure.
Standard single solo battery flight times:
10% RTH kicks in at 16 minutes
6% (13.6 volts) manual landing at 17.5 minutes.
With second 5200mah battery strapped to the belly:
10% RTH kicked in at 19.5 minutes
6% (13.6 volts) manual landing at 21 minutes
The net gain was only 3.5 minutes, for a useful mission time of 19 minutes. I was expecting more like 23-25 minutes based on some rough math and ecalc data. So these results are disappointing to me. I would imagine larger props might add a minute. But regardless, nothing remotely close to being worthwhile. This motor and prop combination just can't efficiently lift that kind of weight. In my opinion, this is not worth the effort and complexity. I probably will not continue to use this.
** This could also be why 3DR is not bothering with a higher capacity battery ** You have to figure a larger battery from 3DR would be even less capacity than what I just tested. Maybe 8000mah or so? Certainly not double the capacity, as it would never fit. Meaning the increased flight time would probably be less or the same as what I got. There is very little to be gained by selling an enhanced battery that only gets you 2-3 minutes. I wouldn't pay extra for that.
However, what I will do is use this XT60 connection as a GPU. I can power the solo off a power supply on the table now rather than wasting batteries.
Power wires soldered to the main power connector inside the solo.
XT60 hanging out the back for the LiPo battery to plug into.
Bonus points if you can guess why this position didn't work. It took me a few minutes to realize that I'm an idiot.
Battery strapped to the belly, where it can actually function
Without the solo battery, the solo has no power information at all. It's being powered only by the auxiliary LiPo. So without the Solo smart battery, it reports 0 volts, and -1 amps due to the logic failure.
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