The hobby drone industry has really converged on the quadcopter as its go-to design. But just like birds, drones continue to evolve from their lumbering ancestors. Could evolution have taken a different path? What’s better than four propellers?
How about just one?
Benjamin Prescher’s novel design has been out there for a few weeks, but we just discovered it and thought it was worth sharing it with the DroneDJ community. His single rotor Ball-Drone relies on just one motor for lift, and he controls it with four servo-activated air vanes. Here’s a little video of it buzzing around indoors.
Prescher has blogged his entire build on Hackaday including the 3-D printed frame (available on Thingiverse), so you can build your own.
The one-propeller drone frame
It uses a Raspberry Pi for brains, and the rest of the build relies on off-the-shelf parts as well, like the radio receiver, lipo battery, motor, propeller, and servos.
Since servos don’t cost as much as brushless motors, it should be possible to get a fairly inexpensive do-it-yourself, one-propeller drone airborne.
A kind of helicopter without a tail, it uses the flight control software Betaflight that’s popular in the racing drone community. It seems to keep it stable and steerable. Prescher believes iNav and Ardupilot should work as well.
The Ball-Drone ready for one-propeller take off
It’s a neat project. But it does look like it will need work if you hope to take steady video with it.
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.
Subscribe to DroneDJ on YouTube for exclusive videos
You’re reading DroneDJ — experts who break news about DJI and the wider drone ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow DroneDJ on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
Related Posts
DJI says its drones will be ready for the new
A one-take drone ad offers a touching look at private
Two awesome videos showcase DJI Air 2S 1-inch sensor