Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
drone la boral
Lot Amorós and Cristina Navarro with Flone. Photograph: LaBoral Photograph: LaBoral
Lot Amorós and Cristina Navarro with Flone. Photograph: LaBoral Photograph: LaBoral

Is it a phone? Is it a drone? No, it's a flone!

This article is more than 9 years old

A team of inventors have produced Flone – a simple H-frame for smartphones, bringing drone technology to the masses

The artist Lot Amorós, and engineers Cristina Navarro and Alexandre Oliver won the Next Things award in 2013 for the Flone invention, an H-shaped airframe which transforms smartphones into airborne apparatus. It is able to fly up to 20 metres, and take photographs and video from above.

Flone has been designed to be cheap and simple to make. The airframe is wooden, and is powered by a standalone battery and four propellers.

"We tried to simplify all the technology of our drones , and also the way of controlling," Amorós told the BBC at the Sonar+D event in Barcelona.

An interesting feature of Flone is that the smartphone in the air is remotely controlled from a smartphone on the ground using the accompanying Android app and a Bluetooth connection.

"What we are seeking is to change a little bit the concept that drones are something that only people with money can afford," said Oliver.

The first ever flight of Flone.

Drones (unmanned aerial vehicles) are everywhere, and their uses are as widespread as the ground they cover.

When drone-use first hit the public consciousness, it was usually in relation to military use and warfare. Now, people are waking up to the positive and creative possibilities of drones.

This month a competition run by National Geographic for drone photography produced stunning results. More drone pictures can be found on Dronestagram.

After the Fukishima nuclear disaster, a team from the University of Bristol designed a drone to measure levels of radiation.

In June, the Federal Aviation Administration in America even launched an investigation into whether a congressman had broken regulations after he used a drone to take his wedding photographs.

DIY drones are not new. Plenty of tutorials exist on how to build a drone, but with the Flone, Amorós, Navarro and Oliver have taken the pursuit of mass drone ownership to new heights.

Here's how to make your own Flone.

Allow BBC content?

This article includes content provided by BBC. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Vibrating smartshoes put Google Maps at your feet

  • Smartshoes, contactless tube journeys and flones: this week in tech

  • Contactless bank cards could see tube customers ditch Oyster cards

  • Amazon Fire Phone review roundup: misfiring on almost all cylinders

  • Boot up: Instagram goes after Snapchat, Airbnb tenants, mobile Pirates

  • Amazon posts huge loss in second quarter, despite sales rise

  • Doubts about Amazon's future overshadow Fire Phone launch

Comments (…)

Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion

Most viewed

Most viewed