 Hello, hello, hello guys. So this is a frame I bought quite a while ago, but it's a five inch. And I always knew that a flying with five inch was gonna be a bit more nimble than flying with a seven inch like the Hudson. Well then going to a six inch like I did my first H frame and then this one. It's a bit of a mess here and it's all gonna get tidied up. But what we're gonna do is sort of build this up pretty cheap with some of the stuff that's around today and it's easily accessible. So this is a Martian two. It weighs 90 grams, 90 grams like this with those four nuts on in there as well. It's 90 grams, but without the battery adapter. Battery adapter in there. So, okay then guys, this is it. This is it put together. Pretty cheap parts. I use the same ESC's of what I've been using but since I first started building this is the main ESC I've been using which is the RaceStar V2. You know what I mean? I'll stick it up. We got a little Caddx camera. This is the Moonlight camera which is, I mean it's not too bad. It's cheap. That's the thing. It's nice and cheap. It's about 22 pounds, about $22. I'm using the Esheen VTX03S. So this is one with smart audio support. Again, a very cheap VTX. The only thing that's actually really not expensive but the TBS. And it's only because I have a, I've got another one. I've got a FR Sky one but I can't find it which was gonna go on it. So I'm just using this temporarily for the VTX. I'm using, I connected directly. It has its own like a PCB built into it and if you don't wanna use it, take it out. You're gonna find it's part of the structure of the whole thing. So I've used it anyway. And there's my connections. Straight onto here and all I did was make a connection up to the another power distribution board which was just the same Matek Beck. It's got a five volt, three amp power on there. And that's why I use it because you get an extra bit of five amp current that you can use if you need it. And then I'm using the Matek, the F405 STD because it's cheap again, 22 pounds. About 22 bucks. This is, you know, a few pounds, few dollars and about $20 for the frame. The motors are not gonna be the ones that stay on here. It's all out, but I only had three of another motor because I was using it on the back of the wing, one out of four. But this is, I'm gonna swap these out. I've got some e-sheen. Cheap oats come through now. I think that I bought them secondhand. They're supposed to be brand new on a machine but they wouldn't ever use. So 30 pounds, about $30. It's the same. If it says $30, you know, by the time we get it over here in the tax and everything, it's about the same on pounds. The witch goes to show how much we get screwed. This one is a top. I'm gonna stick the battery on the top of this one. Usually I'd do it underneath, but this time it's on the top. So yes, that's it. This is a pretty cheap little build, really. Especially when you've got the cheaper motors on these are my favorite motors. So they're gonna be staying off there. Gonna be used on the wing and I'm gonna put the e-sheens on here. These are 1720 RPMs and a KV, I should say. And the e-sheens are 2,300, so 2,300 KV. So it'll probably be a little bit more zippy at the lower throttle maybe. So that's it. Let's give it a little fly. It's not gonna be at the highest. It's gonna be a low level, just flying around a little enclosed space. And it handles okay. Everything on here's just been set up with INAV doing its basic default settings. The only things that you have to adjust is, like what you are, will you be using? Which serial port you are? Both the same thing. Which ones will you be using for which and on this I think I've used there. For my receiver, I've got the, I'm using three. Because serial port two is normally done for the receiver, but I use three because I'm just using the transmit and receive on the one you are. And then for the smart audio, because that's the only connection I need really, I've used there, I think it's channel four for smart audio. And that's it. That's all I've used on that for that. The rest of it's just for the control. And that's it. And of course you might wanna set up your on-screen display, but everything else is pretty much just as it comes out of the box. I selected the mixer for the codex. I selected the profile of the X-rotor, multi-rotor quad, which is between three and seven inches, I believe. And so this is all good. So it's just basically set up. So you don't have to worry about is it gonna be vibrating around. No, not really, we've got a lot of excess weight. Maybe, yeah, but if it's, no, it should be okay. So just standard settings out there, enough. That's one of the things I do love about INAV is you can just put it together as long as you've got your connections corrected and sorted correctly and you sort out a few modes for yourself to arm the thing. And maybe have your angle and horizontal in your acro mode, but that's pretty much all you need. Get it up in there, you've got that. That's great about INAV. So here comes the bit of a like video.