Quadcopter
1 Introduction 2 Packaging list 3 Hardware Specification 4 Features 5 Usage 6 How to buy
Introduction
The Crazyflie is a tiny quadcopter often referred to as a nano-quad, built using the PCB itself as the frame. Developed solely by open source tools and designed with development in mind. E.g. we choose 0603 components (resistors & caps) over 0402 to make it easier to replace components. The voltage regulators are adjustable which makes it possible to change the digital and analog supply voltages simply by changing a couple of resistors.
Packaging list
- Crazyflie control board
- 5 x motor mounts (one as spare)
- 5 x coreless motors (one as spare)
- 5 x CW propellers
- 5 x CCW propellers
- 1 LiPo batter
- A crazyradio
Hardware Specification
- Powerful 32 bit MCU: STM32F103CB @ 72 MHz (128kb flash, 20kb RAM)
- 3-axis high-performance MEMs gyros with 3-axis accelerometer: Invensense MPU-6050
- Available footprints to manually solder magnetometer HMC5883L/HMC5983 or/and barometer MS5611 (Mounted on the 10-DOF version)
- Expansion header 2×10 pins 1.27mm (0.05”) pitch including power, I2C/UART, SPI/ADC. Header also contains ARM Cortex 10-pin JTAG (header not included)
- On-board low-energy radio@1mW based on the nRF24L01+ chip.
Features
- Small and lightweight, around 19g and about 90mm motor to motor
- Flight time up to 7 minutes with standard 170mAh Li-Po battery
- Standard micro-USB connector for charging which takes ~20min for the stock 170mAh Li-Po battery
- Up to 80m range (environment dependent) when using the Crazyradio USB dongle
- 4-layer low noise PCB design with separate voltage regulators for digital and analog supply
Usage
Before you go ahead and assemble the Crazyflie check the Crazyflie control board and the Crazyradio electronics, Attach a powered micro-USB cable to the Crazyflie control board. It should power up and blink 5 times with the green LED. After that the green LED should be fully on and the red LED should blink.
How to buy
Reservd