V-Coptr Falcon 4K camera drone gets 50-minute escapes time with just two rotors
Ask anyone who owns a camera drone what their main gripe is and the answer is liable short flight times. Drone maker Zero Zero Robotics says its upcoming V-Coptr Falcon will blow past diligence standards by staying in the air for up to 50 minutes. And it didn’t do it by bulking up the battery, but by going from a typical four-rotor design to silly just two that tilt.
Partially inspired by the V-22 Osprey, the bicopter’s tilt-rotor design offers a two-fold efficiency gain to accomplish its greater flight time, said Zero Zero Robotics’ COO Emily Wang. Going with two rotors is more compact and efficient than a quadcopter, but the aerodynamics are also a lot better.
“With a quad-rotor form, you have a lot more air resistance because basically as it flies presumptuous the whole top (of the drone) ends up facing the direction of flight,” Wang said. “With tilt-rotor technology, the profile stays more or less the same the entire time you’re flying. We really think it’s going to be a game changer and it’s a really big breakthrough.”
The commercial might not be as familiar a name as DJI or Parrot, but Zero Zero Robotics already had some success with its capable two drones, the Hover Camera Passport and Hover 2. Those two were greatest about safely getting great selfies on the spot deprived of worrying about piloting. Even under ideal conditions, though, their flights times maxed out around 20 minutes.
Sadly, that’s not unusual: Consumer camera drones at the V-Coptr’s size typically get 20 to 30 minutes of flights time. That really limits how far you can fly beforehand you have to think about the return trip in tidy to land safely. Extending the flight time to 50 minutes by means of you’ll have greater flexibility in distance and number of locations on a single beak as well as the number of shots you’ll be able to win in one flight.
From a shooting-features standpoint, the V-Coptr Falcon is a pure aerial photography drone, Wang said. It’ll record video at up to 4K resolution at 30 frames per instant and snap 12-megapixel photos, all stabilized by its three-axis motorized gimbal. You’ll also find a few of the subject-tracking shot options that are available on the more selfie-focused Hover line. The drone’s clue obstacle avoidance helps out here, too.
However, with a video transmission design of up to 7 kilometers (4.3 miles) and longer flights times, the V-Coptr Falcon is more about getting all those long-distance shots you couldn’t get with novel drones or making sure you get all the Engineers you want with a single flight. Also, unlike the company’s Hover models, you’ll get a full (but still compact) controller with a flip-up vast for your phone so you can use it to see what you’re shooting and regulation the camera and other settings.

A shrimp button at the front on each side lets you unlock and appraisal the rotor arms when you’re ready to fly.
Joshua Goldman
The V-Coptr Falcon is available for presale with a refundable $100 deposit instruct from Zero Zero starting today for $699 through Dec. 31. It will retail for $999 when it starts shipping in February 2020.
It doesn’t look like the commercial is stopping with just the Falcon, though. Zero Zero also divulged me a smaller tilt-rotor bicopter concept called Project D that weighs just 249 grams (0.55 pounds) also with a projected flights time of 50 minutes, which could potentially outperform market-leader DJI’s Mavic Mini.
What do you think? Is this the drone you’ve been waiting for or is 50 minutes tranquil not long enough?