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This is amazing. Even the landing gear (struts?) is part of the PCB. I hope the author considers selling kits or outsourcing kits to SeedStudio. I live in a country where digikey order shipping is quite pricey.

The author estimates the BOM to be a little under US$13. At that price it would be fun to try create a swarm for DIY drone lights show.

[1] https://circuitdigest.com/microcontroller-projects/DIY-wifi-...



FWIW, making just 10 might drive that $13 price down quite a bit.

Although, it looks like 1 unit might be closer to $50 (at least for the suppliers I might use), but $150 for 10.

I think costs could be cut somewhat though. The USB->serial chip is nearly $6, but differently packaged it can be $4.40 for 1 or $3.99/ea for 10, and alternative chips that seem like they should be good enough can be cheaper still. The voltage regulator they chose is $1/ea for 500ma, while the one I would normally go to is $0.22/ea for 1000ma (dropping down to $0.13/ea for 10).


If you're making lots, you could uncouple the programming interface which isn't needed while in flight, thereby saving both BOM and weight.


The entire BOM is crazy. The USB to UART chip is wholly unnecessary if you simply pick a better (at an equal or lower price) ESP32-S3 module which has a USB interface.

I suspect this was designed based on things the author had in their cupboard as opposed to something that's reasonable for new designs.


Does it need a regulator at all? ESP32 should be able to run on raw battery voltage, assuming the ESP is necessary. RealTek TX2/RX2 + PIC10/ATTiny10/CH32V003 could be even cheaper if user is okay with a dedicated transmitter.


Which is your go-to voltage regulator?




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