Product: Elite Drone MKX Dual Camera Quadcopter
Model: 400318
Condition: New
Take flight with the Turbo Challenge Elite Drone MKX, a high-performance remote-control drone built for speed, stability, and fun.
Designed for both beginners and experienced flyers, this drone features intuitive controls, one-touch takeoff and landing, and exciting stunt capabilities like 360° flips for an action-packed flying experience.
Equipped with dual rechargeable batteries for extended playtime and a 2.4GHz remote system for smooth, responsive control, the Elite Drone MKX delivers reliable performance indoors or outdoors.
With built-in camera functionality and Wi-Fi connectivity, users can capture aerial photos and videos while enjoying a real-time flying experience right from their smartphone.
Let’s see, at a 20km/h speed with a 50m control range, according to the backup nav computer for the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission the number of seconds until loss of control at max v is
Specs
Product: Elite Drone MKX Dual Camera Quadcopter
Model: 400318
Condition: New
What’s Included?
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Monday, May 11
Gosh, I think the drone.horse days are now a decade behind us. Going by feel, they’re a geological era ago.
Holy shit, it still works!
I did the math so you don’t have to:
and also:
@MrGoodGuy doesn’t look like YOU did the math, but thanks anyhoo.
Is there a sample of the video feed somewhere?
Like is it early YouTube video quality level bad?
Or 56k dialup RealPlayer video quality level bad?
@Narwalt I think the “0.3 MP” goes a long way to speaking for video quality. Knowing the frame rate would help also.
@Narwalt Found a description claiming 4K video.
https://www.amazon.ae/TURBO-CHALLENGE-Aircraft-Rechargeable-Batteries/dp/B0D9BZYCDH
@Narwalt 0.3MP almost certainly means 640x480. A very respectable resolution, for 1994.
What’s the availability of Elite Armor for this Elite Drone?
That write-up was disturbingly close.
$40 from Walmart, $25 from eBay, but still looks identical to my $15 Temu drone /pass
@user98914045 Temu? Yikes.
Let’s see, at a 20km/h speed with a 50m control range, according to the backup nav computer for the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission the number of seconds until loss of control at max v is
But does it really have 2 batteries THIS time. Lol