POV Airsoft Turret On A RC Plane

To be honest, we’re surprised this hasn’t been tried before — then again, maybe it has! But what we do know is that the folks over at Flite Test have rigged up an electric Airsoft gun to a large RC airplane, aptly called The Kracken.

The planes are a scaled up version of their own FT Versa Wing, which feature two props, giving them the ability of differential thrust. Not only were they able to strap a semi-automatic Airsoft pistol on top, they also have two GoPros filming the action and giving the gunner a POV for shooting down the enemy plane! Don’t worry though, the enemy plane features its own weapon — A permanent marker! This hardly seems fair though, as the closer the marker gets, the easier shooting down the plane will be!

Don’t take our word for it though, check out the awesome video for yourself, after the break.

Not impressive enough? Earlier this year, Flite Test also produced a plane with a built in afterburner!

[Thanks Jon!]

28 thoughts on “POV Airsoft Turret On A RC Plane

        1. …or to save you time allow me to quote it >> ‘realsentrygun.com is currently #10 on google US for the keyword sentry+gun. Your job is to make it 3rd. Here”s the catch: no payment plans, no multi-step payments. Just one flat price that gets paid only when the requirement is met. It”s your job to research the site and the keyword to see if it is doable before bidding.’

      1. They could’ve done a few things that would have taken longer – maybe PWM on the servos to allow more than 3 angles to aim at, and another servo for vertical aim. The guy originally designed it for a quadcopter, IIRC, which is a totally different platform. This would have been fine for that. But on an airplane, he could have made a few small changes to make this project 400x better.

  1. That guy seriously thinks the shooting plane’s projectiles are slowed by moving forward? Did he consider that the chasing plane is moving forward at the same speed? Physics fail.

    1. Yes they can. It’s called first person view/video (FPV). A small camera’s video feed is sent to a transmitter on the plane. A receiver on the ground (goggles or small screen) will display the feed in real time to the pilot.

    2. Hi HackJack,
      Somewhere on their site – I wasted SO MUCH TIME at work yesterday – you can find a magic gold box in a video called “rc 305 5.8g av receiver” use your google-fu and its a cheap enough but for what you get

      Now to make my own FPV goggles.

      Twibz

    3. They are most likely using Fatshark FPV goggles. They normally run off the 5.8 or 2.4 ghz band. With little power and high gain you can acheive flights over miles. (provided your wireless remote controller doesn’t give out first).

      Source: I own one.

  2. Man this is taxing to watch, all the fake ‘acting’ they attempt and then two slow planes they try to keep lined up so he can hit it while they continue with their tiresome banter.
    Had to skip then stop early.
    Try being a bit more real guys.

        1. Your comment doesn’t add to the discussion, and it’s in all caps…but it contains a link to your blog, which people might go to through your comment.

          So you’re not adding to the discussion, but you’re taking users to your site.

          It’s cool that you’re active on the internet, btw – when I was 8, we still only had 56k dialup through AOL, and blogs weren’t really a thing. Keep on doin’ what you’re doin’!

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