RC aviation has a steep entry curve that loses more beginners than any other aspect of the hobby: the first crash, which arrives within the first three flights for most new pilots, often destroys confidence along with the airframe. The hobby has evolved significantly over the past five years to address this — GPS stabilisation, self-levelling gyroscopes, and return-to-home functions have transformed what it means to be a beginner pilot. ExHobby’s range reflects this evolution, offering stabilised aircraft at prices that make the entry point genuinely approachable.
Three Models Tested
We flew the EFL Trainer 1200mm (a classic foam trainer with GPS), the Ranger fixed-wing (a 1500mm cruiser), and the S-Frog racing drone across six weeks of field sessions. The Trainer was assessed specifically for beginner suitability; the Ranger for cruising endurance; the drone for freestyle capability.
Trainer Performance
The GPS-stabilised Trainer is the standout product in the range for its target audience. In stabilised mode, it holds altitude and attitude without input, allowing beginners to process orientation and control response without fighting the aircraft simultaneously. Our test pilot — a complete beginner with six hours total stick time — landed the aircraft successfully on their fourth flight. Without stabilisation, this typically takes 15–20 hours of practice.
Ranger Endurance
The Ranger on its included 4S 3000mAh battery produced 42 minutes of cruising flight at 65km/h — exceeding the stated 35-minute figure. The wing loading is low enough for thermal hunting in light conditions, and the model handles mild turbulence without pilot correction required at cruise power.
ExHobby RC Planes & Drones Review 2026: Beginner to Advanced Models Tested
ExHobby delivers RC aircraft at price points that make the hobby genuinely accessible without compromising on the features experienced pilots need. The GPS-stabilised trainer is the best entry-level fixed-wing we have tested.