Spyke
lemmy.world

I have no idea if this is a clever bypass around expensive commercial offerings, a clever waste of time that barely improves over doing it by hand, or somewhere in between, but it sure looks like a nice design and print.

66
sh.itjust.works

Yeah, definite neato factor but by eyeball at least I feel like I could do that bend by hand within a mm tolerance of this. Hard to imagine this precision is needed. Makes sense if mass producing these I guess.

7
Wilshirereply
lemmy.world

This is a workshop for combat FPV drones, so precision is extremely important.

47
sh.itjust.works

Interesting. Important for balancing? Or does the signal reception really depend on that much precision? I'm Suprised to learn that either way.

5
Wilshirereply
lemmy.world

They have to operate at very long distances in an electronic-warfare saturated environment. Even the tiniest imperfections can be the difference between life and death.

8
ludreply

And in this case you want death!

7

I make a lot of stuff and I don't think I could bend it that precisely by hand. Also I would take much much longer.

7

I think the black thing they show at the end is the usual tool to do it, this just looks like 20 extra needless steps.

6

It's for bulk building drones you have into the faces of occupiers, good enough is necessary perfect is not.

3
lemmy.today

What am I looking at here? What are these antennae used for?

23
yokonzoreply
lemmy.world

I'm not a radio guy, but for a drone antennae, wouldn't you want vertical range rather than broadside range?

4

A drone operator usually is not standing directly under the drone, so no. Or alternately, the drone if probably further away from you horizontally than vertically during most of its operation.

One interesting thing here is that, for a given altitude, the antenna gain will be higher the further away the drone is.

13
lemmy.world

Do these come flat packed is that what the tool is for or do you form the whole thing first then use the tool to bend?

8

Looks like stamped or laser cut pieces that then need bending in the 3rd dimension.

Then soldering a coaxial connector or wire to each half to finish them.

2

You reached the end