The red arrow shows how it came. Those are the connections that were not soldered fully.Yes, please post a photo or two. This seems a very common defect. I almost crashed into people at an indoor flying event twice last night because of these sensor issues. Only because I am a somewhat skilled LOS RC pilot and had a little luck on my side, no one was injured. Could have easily gone another way, and someone would be suing Yuneec today. You would think the company would be on top of this!
@DuctPad: I admire your daring approach. SMD soldering requires a lot of skill and special tools and sharp eyes.
Judging by your photos I would call it a poor design to piggypack a subboard by a SMD connection. Taking into consideration vibrations and mechanical stress by shock I'd rather say it is a faulty design where a loss of the drone is to be expected rather sooner than later.
SMD soldering especially when massproduced in certain assembly lines is known to be extra sensitive to mechanical stress. On the other hand it is a problem of cause and effect: Yuneec could argue that the broken connection was the result of the crash. Unless the IRS failure does not show up in the logs before disaster stroke it would be hard to tell.
thank very much. You solved my problem. The breeze IS ok nosThe red arrow shows how it came. Those are the connections that were not soldered fully.![]()
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They came soldered, but can easily break upon hard landing or crash. Also if you try to access that board it will break the solder points very easily.The red arrow shows how it came. Those are the connections that were not soldered fully.![]()
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