Fractal SP8 – 1S AIO Flight Controller – Rev-04

$69.42

(3 customer reviews)

A 1S AIO that doesn’t suck

52 in stock


  • Assemble the FC and ESC for me?

    The AIO comes with separate ESC and FC boards so you can assemble the motor connectors if needed (needs trimmed flush before marrying)

    This is meant to be a DIY operation, however I offer you the option to assemble it for you here.


Categories: , SKU: FRACTAL-SP8AIO

Description

A few notes about this product!

  • This is a rather experimental AIO designed for enthusiast builders. Some assembly required 😁
    Check out the manual page to learn how to prepare and marry up the FC & ESC together for your personal use.

  • Likewise, this is also an ongoing development product that may present some differences between batches. Those differences will be communicated in advance here down below and can be discussed on the Fractal Discord and Facebook groups.

Please do not place an order if any of these terms do not suit you and browse our other 3rd party AIO options

What is it?

I know you probably don’t mind reading through a spicy description but I also know you’re not the type to waste time so let’s get the facts down right away!


Features:

  • Dual board, edge-connected, back to back construction.
    Grants you a replacement or upgrade path to your AIO.
    Toast your ESC? keep your FC. New FC version with different peripherals? reuse your ESC.

  • 0402 minimum size components.
    Makes it highly repairable. Schematics and component map will be published for your own repairs*. Learn to become proficient at board level repair.

  • All that in a fairly lightweight package still, as little as ~4g
    Thanks to the 0.6mm board thickness. I’ve also broken down the USB pads if you want to discard it entirely.

  • Built for 1S
    None of that 1-2S rubbish that don’t actually work so well at 1S. It’s got an onboard Boostybaby will power the FC and all your accessories down to 1.8V

  • State of the art 32Bits, 8A ESC
    Starts up at 1001 throttle, gives you the whole throttle range of resolution.
    No 4.5A mosfets, run all your bonked up high KV motors with confidence

  • Future proof AT32F435 MCU
    Faster than F7, can run much faster PID loops than F405 or god forbid F411

  • Serial ELRS 2.4g on-board
    SPI must be put to rest (along with every manufacturer that still pushes for it)

Specs:

  • Input voltage: 1S Only
  • MCU: AT32F435
  • IMU: ICM-42688P or 42605
  • Onboard RX: Serial ELRS 2.4G
  • ESC: AM32, 8A Mosfets (Escape32 compatible)
  • Blackbox: 8MB Flash
  • 5V Rail: 2A Max, down to 1.8V
  • OSD: Yes.
  • Uarts: 2 full (4 and 5) + uart 3 on ELRS
  • Mounting: 25.5 x 25.5mm
  • Dimensions: 28 x 28mm
  • Weight: ~4g excl, ~4.5g including USB and Motor Plugs

Good? now let’s move on to why I made it; It is my opinion that:

Most whoop flight controllers/AIO suck.

There has not been a single one in the history of brushless whoops that didn’t nail all the boxes. (since the CrazybeeF3; that thing was lit for the time)

  • Poor durability (ESCs, receivers, VTX breaking easily, DOA or otherwise)
  • Poor design (resource assignment requiring layers of workarounds, pad layouts (video in at the back?)
  • Poor features (weak ESCs, antenna/motor pad options, weak 5v rail for digital)
  • Poor performance (F411, 8-bit ESCs forever, high electrical noise to the gyro…)
  • Poor repairability (dense design, single board, fry any subsystem, bin the whole thing)
  • Poor availability (elusive stock, sudden discontinuation without warning)

Now yes there were a few that nearly did it, unfortunately they fell to that last point.

Surely we can fix all those shortcomings??

How hard could it be???

— Which I will answer a little below

And even more so,

With all these big FPV companies selling us those wacky boards, why can’t they just listen to what we need and simply make a good one?

Well I got one for you, but you’re probably not gonna like it.

Because they do NOT have any incentive to do better, for we keep buying their rubbish anyway — granted, because there’s nothing better to buy

As you can surely feel by now, this remains a loaded topic for me, and I promise you it’ll all make sense if you stay with me a little longer.

Ladies and gents, introducing the SP8 AIO! (pronounced SPITE)

How Did We Get There? (Lore Chapter; skip ahead if you just want straight to the meat)

Let me start with this; I am NOT an electrical designer. My trade is in industrial product design.

The frames are at the heart of what makes Fractal; they are the foundation of the flight experiences I want to create and share with you.

All the electronics I’ve been dealing with were specifically meant to support my frames, as spare parts and even more so in the BNF.

Needless to say, by now we’ve built hundreds of them. They enable folks to skip right to flying and simply enjoy the frames as I intended.

They also constitute a major part of the revenue that makes it even possible for me to keep developing new concepts for the hobby.

So far most components have been fairly steady to procure; cameras, motors, props…(let’s not talk about VTX these days thought lol)

Flight Controllers though, oh man.

We had a long streak with happymodel supplying all our AIOs for 2 years; a mostly positive partnership thanks to their flawless support, but not without hiccups with rather high DOA rate, 

Of course those DOA units would be detected in BNF assembly, but as a small and growing business we couldn’t order large amounts, and often times ended up running short of FCs because of it, on BNF orders already purchased by customers.

This part really put me through lots of stress as I always want to offer the best possible service to our supporting customers, and asking them to wait for it really wasn’t it.

I had to do something about it.

I had been mindlessly watching the likes of EEVBlog, Louis Rossman, GreatScott for a while by now

So I thought, well when I return those FCs for RMA, they will perform on-board repair and send them back anyway, how about I just skip this step and perform the repairs myself? how hard could it be?

And I got some equipment; a hot air gun, electronic microscope, some shoddy flux. Great.

After a few attempts I was able to replace burned mosfets. Cool.

Then I came across a board that kept frying the fets even after replacing; something else was off, couldn’t figure it out.

I realized repairing the gear was only a part of the work; most of it was actually diagnosing what to repair exactly…

So I got more equipment; lab power supply, oscilloscope, IR thermometer…

They did help a lot getting more repairs done, keeping the inventory up through the DOA cases.

And before long I realized I had all the equipment to start developing my own electronics, so came out the boostyboi and boostybaby later on

However, then the FCs I got so familiar of using/repairing, got discontinued.

So again, no FCs, no BNF, I went out searching for new ones, with mixed results…

Until finally it occurred to me that the FC market got so absolutely bad in the mean time, that betafpv was now considered the best around?!?

That was around February this year 2024.

That’s when I snapped.

I hit up my good friend Hanfer, head dev of Quicksilver, and offered him to collab on an AIO truly made for us.

We decided on a chip and feature set, and started the schematics, leaving him most of the FC part, where he assigned resources to the MCU in the most optimal way possible, while I mostly took care of the 1S optimized ESC.

What followed -on my side at least- was 2 weeks of pure, uninterrupted, spite-fueled blind rage laying out the AIO in KiCad.

Mind you, I had never worked on a project this size (the boostybaby is 9 components, the SP8 over 220) let alone on 4 layers.

Yet, somehow all that spite accumulated from years of dealing with all the FC issues managed to drive me through that process, as all the pieces came together in that critical mass moment.

I’m telling you for these 2 weeks I barely slept a couple hours a day, as the moment I’d lay down in bed and close my eyes I’d start seeing rats lines and still layout the board in my head 😂

It didn’t help that we practically worked shifts with Hanfer, he would finetune the schematics during his european hours and I’d take over on my asian time.

What a bonkers time that was.

But after just 2 weeks we had it, a fully resolved, laid out AIO, exactly to our specs, ready for prototype.

Hell yea.

You’d think that surely, if all those big dog fpv companies can’t get it right, there’s no way 2 idiots in a shed would right,

Well so did we.

So imagine our surprise when I assembled that initial prototype, and after a few bodges found most of the features ended up working. first time. surprise pikachu face.

Not exactly a flying FC yet, but all of the FC and most of the ESCs were fully functional.

So we fixed the little goofs here and there; some pin strapping, layout reliabilizing…

And with our 2nd board we had it. A fully working, FLYING, hand assembled prototype board.

It took us a few months due to mostly idle time dealing with other urgencies and a loop around home manufacturing,

but essentially, the 2 idiots in a shed made it.

But made what exactly? 

What do you get?


Due to the rather experimental nature of this AIO there will be some assembly required;

The FC and ESC has to come separately; because the motor connectors must be trimmed flush with the ESC before soldering and FC/ESC marrying up.

This means that the motor connectors won’t be assembled by default; they will be included in the package but can be installed for you as an option.

From Rev-04 I’ve also replaced the USB Micro by a homebrew USB-C AND Micro to JST-SH, beta style.

I’m also replacing the complicated antenna options by a simple IPEX and a short antenna.

As well as some purple grommets for mounting.

Finally, a 80mm, A30 pigtail is included. (BT2 compatible)

Ah yes and almost forgot, of course it will be purple solder mask with gold plated pads 😄


To break it down:

Contents:

  • 1x SP8 FC
  • 1x SP8 ESC
  • 1x USB-C + Micro to JST adapter
  • 1 x JST wire
  • 5x Motor Plugs
  • 1x A30 pigtail with 80mm of 20AWG wire
  • 5x Grommets
 
Note: Being still very much in active development, some details may change until delivery to accommodate for production, availability or user friendliness.

Revision History

  • Rev-03: First public release and pre-order. Thank you for your support!
  • Rev-04: USB-JST, unified antenna, accessories.
    • Swapped USB-C for JST-SH connector.
    • Includes custom PCB USB-C + micro 2-1 adapter to JST (betafpv layout)
    • Replaced built-to-order antenna to IPEX (includes short inline dipole)
    • Increased grommet support to prevent them from popping out (PURPLE grommets now included 😎)
    • Revised motor footprint, now with separate solder pads for easier soldering
    • Various minor adjustments to the BOM and layout for performance, weight, user friendliness and QC

Additional information

BNF Flight Controller

Fractal SP8 AIO

3 reviews for Fractal SP8 – 1S AIO Flight Controller – Rev-04

  1. icebalm (verified owner)

    I absolutely love this AIO for 1S quads. The on board boostyboi makes sure power hungry VTX’s stay powered on. The processor is fast enough to to 8K PID loops, and AM32 ESCs work perfectly. The included whip antenna for the receiver is great for tinywhoops, but I swap them out for T dipoles on stuff like the fractal wingman. I’d say there’s really only two weaknesses of this AIO but they’re very minor: 1. only 2 usable UARTS, 2. Lack of I2C for magnetometers. If I had one thing I could add it would be a way to electronically control power to the VTX, to be able to put it on AUX USER1 in Betaflight for example. Overall solid AIO, I have two of these and they work great.

    Helpful? 0 0
  2. OkiFPV

    Please!

    Please make this one Back to stock. 🙏🏻

    Helpful? 0 0
  3. McShakyFPV (verified owner)

    Awesome!

    I love fractal engineering. If you’ve watched any of Yves build videos, you know that he is extremely good at his job and one of the leaders in the tiny drone engineering marketplace.

    Helpful? 0 1
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