Everyone builds their first FPV quad wrong. It's a rite of passage — but it doesn't have to be as expensive as it usually is. Here's how to not do it wrong in 2025.
The build philosophy
Your first quad will crash. Hard. Repeatedly. Design your build around durability and cheap repairability, not performance. A fragile 5" racing build as your first quad is a money furnace. Start small and tough.
Recommended first build: 3.5" Cinewhoops
The BetaFPV Pavo35 frame or an HGLRC Sector 132 are perfect starting points — prop guards mean you can practice indoors without destroying everything within arm's reach.
Parts list (UK sourced):
- Frame: HGLRC Sector 132 3.5" — ~£28 from RaceDayQuads UK
- Flight Controller: BetaFPV F4 2-4S AIO (FC + ESC combined) — ~£45
- Motors: Emax ECO II 1404 3700KV — ~£32 for 4
- Camera + VTX: Walksnail Avatar Nano Kit — ~£89 (digital, worth the premium)
- Receiver: ExpressLRS EP2 — ~£18
- Props: HQ 3.5x2.9x3 — £6 for 10 pairs
- Battery: Tattu 550mAh 2S LiPo (x4) — ~£40
Total: ~£258 — plus a radio (RadioMaster Pocket at £65) and goggles (BetaFPV Goggles 2 Lite at £99 to start).
The tools
Soldering iron (TS101 or Pinecil), flux, thin solder, heat shrink, a multimeter, and patience. YouTube and the BETAFLIGHT configuration tool are free. The Betaflight wiki is better than any paid course.
UK registration (Operator ID and Flyer ID) is required before first flight for any drone ≥250g. Operator ID must be labelled on the frame.