I usually put 30 in both CW/CCW and make a 60 degree angle then slide the yaw slider to 30 and match the blade angle with that 60 degree I just made. 22.5 & 45 seem much easier to fold. Thanks!
Yup pretty much. And if we all calibrate similarly, we can compare tunes more effectively. If you take two helis that are the same but have radically different calibrations, the tunes will likely be quite a bit different. Or as Chris said, the one with the incorrect calibration will have poor behaviors that are very hard, if not impossible, to tune out.
@@tanneringram1449 30 is totally fine too. Decided on 22.5 in this video because of how easy it is to make a 45 degree wedge. The calibration should be too close to matter, if it's even different, between the two.
This is the best tutorial out there! Very good explained. Thank you!
I agree with those who stated that this is the best tutorial video on this substance to date!
simple but very helpful.. thank you very much
FINALLY a good video for this fairly easy process. All of the setup guides either skip over this or describe it incorrectly...
I just redid mine-thanks!!
Robert coming in with the easiest explanation.
Bro thank you so much. Now I have to recalibrate all my Heli’s 😂😂
I usually put 30 in both CW/CCW and make a 60 degree angle then slide the yaw slider to 30 and match the blade angle with that 60 degree I just made. 22.5 & 45 seem much easier to fold. Thanks!
Thanks Rob.
Thanks for the vid! What's the effect of a not properly calibrated tail? Are any FC internal values different?
Your yaw gains will be difficult to tune (if even possible) if you get the calibration wrong. At least that was my experience!
Yup pretty much. And if we all calibrate similarly, we can compare tunes more effectively.
If you take two helis that are the same but have radically different calibrations, the tunes will likely be quite a bit different. Or as Chris said, the one with the incorrect calibration will have poor behaviors that are very hard, if not impossible, to tune out.
I calibrate to 30 usually, any major difference or do the RF devs specify 22.5 is the key number?
@@tanneringram1449 30 is totally fine too. Decided on 22.5 in this video because of how easy it is to make a 45 degree wedge. The calibration should be too close to matter, if it's even different, between the two.
@ sweet. Great video