I received my Autoqaud 6 today and 6 ESC32, noticed just how small the backup battery is and wondered if it is already flat.
Well it is FLAT, measured 0.8 mV, YES!! zero point 8 millivolts.
Made sure contacts are good underneath, nope, it is FLAT.
Now what ?
Read the wiki on development
"To change and compile the code into a flashable *.hex file the AQ Team uses the Rowley Crossworks Compiler for ARM. You can download a fully functional evaluation version here."
Sure for 30 days which is hardly enough to do anything, then it is $1500 plus another $300 for debug
I thought not having a schematic would be OK, now I find it is NOT OK.
What is so darn secret about the schematic, I see little bits dribbled out when questions are asked.
You need to reconsider giving us a schematic.
My initial enthusiasm for Autoquad has taken a nose dive, sorry, guys, not good enough IMHO.
The hassle of finding such a small battery, soldering it on and wondering when it will next go flat, the money to be paid to Crossworks when free compilers are abundant.
I can see a lot of obvious engineering issues with both the FC and the ESC32 and to risk thousands of dollars of equipment and time on this. the word reliable does not immediately come to mind.
In the quest to make it so small a lot of reliability has been thrown aside, I would much rather see a LARGER well engineered board.