Author: Allan Cohen
Choosing a radio protocol is arguably as important as choosing the radio itself. The protocol dictates your range, how “locked in” you feel, what telemetry data you get, how much redundancy you have, and how much you pay for every new plane or drone you build.
Here’s how the six major players stack up.
Quick Comparison Matrix
Reliability & Link Confidence
Link Speed (Latency)
- ExpressLRS: 3–5ms possible at 500–1000Hz. FPV and 3D heaven.
- FrSky: ~15–20ms. Snappy, modern feel.
- Spektrum: ~20–30ms. Smooth, predictable, more than fast enough for 99% of pilots.
- Jeti / Futaba / PowerBox: ~20–40ms. Rock-solid consistency prioritized over speed.
Latency differences only truly matter for FPV racing, top-tier heli 3D, or competitive drone work.
Telemetry Capability
Jeti:
Still the king. EX Bus allows wireless programming of ESCs, servos, gyros, and power systems directly from the transmitter. Deep, fast, reliable telemetry — but expensive.
PowerBox:
Telemetry is system-level, not just RF-level. You get battery health, power flow, regulator temperatures, servo loads, and redundancy status. This is aircraft diagnostics, not just telemetry.
FrSky:
Best value telemetry ecosystem. Sensors are affordable, flexible, and plentiful. Excellent balance.
Spektrum:
Good but limited. Smart telemetry works well, but customization and third-party expansion are weaker than Jeti or FrSky.
Futaba:
Closed and functional. Does the job, but expensive and limited in variety.
ExpressLRS:
The very new ELRS V4.0, along with recent RadioMaster offerings have completely changed the game. Gone are the days of "basic link health only."
Native Sensors: The latest RadioMaster ER-series PWM receivers (e.g., ER6GV, ER8GV) now feature built-in variometers and flight pack voltage sensing. No external sensors required—it’s plug-and-play for gliders and planes.
Bandwidth: ELRS 4.0 introduces "Gemini Telemetry", which utilizes dual active links to double telemetry bandwidth. It can now handle high-speed GPS data, flight attitude (Horizon), and even Turbine telemetry (VSpeak/HoTT protocol support) without choking the control link.
Range Comparison (numbers to take with care)
This is where marketing claims often mislead. Let’s talk about usable range, not theoretical limits.
Visual Line of Sight (LOS) Flying
Jeti / Futaba / Spektrum / FrSky:
All comfortably exceed 5–8 km LOS with proper installation. This is already far beyond what most pilots can see or legally fly.
PowerBox:
Similar RF range to Jeti, but with far greater system safety if something fails.
ExpressLRS:
Easily 20–50 km+ with correct antennas and power levels. Completely unnecessary for LOS, but unbeatable in interference.
Practical Takeaway
For traditional RC aircraft, range is not the limiting factor. Confidence, redundancy, and telemetry quality matter far more than raw distance.
ELRS wins on range by an absurd margin — but most pilots will never use even 10% of it.
7-Channel Receiver Price (Typical Cost)
- PowerBox (e.g., PBR-26D): €90–130
- Jeti: €75–90
- Futaba: €60–80
- Spektrum: €45–70
- FrSky: €35–55
- ExpressLRS: €15–25 (€20-35 with built-in Vario and Voltage telemetry)
Never forget the hidden Cost Reality: You can equip an entire foam fleet with ELRS for the price of one PowerBox receiver.
The Verdict: Which One Is for You?
Choose PowerBox if: You fly very large, expensive models where power redundancy matters more than RF. You want to know what failed before it becomes catastrophic.
Choose Jeti if: You fly turbines, high-end gliders, or competition models. You want the best telemetry, redundancy, and long-term confidence.
Choose Futaba if: You want a rock-solid, no-nonsense system that just works and never surprises you.
Choose Spektrum if: You want the easiest entry point with excellent ecosystem integration and minimal learning curve.
Choose FrSky (ETHOS) if: You want the best all-rounder: modern features, great telemetry, fair pricing, and flexibility.
Choose ExpressLRS if: you want the highest performance link on the market and refuse to overpay for brand names. With ELRS 4.0 and modern PWM receivers, you no longer sacrifice telemetry for range—you get both. Getting rid of the frustrating “Ch5 reserved for arming” limitation also helps greatly in the learning curve. Perfect for pilots who want a "set and forget" bulletproof link that handles everything from park flyers to competition models or turbines.

Thanks for that. I switched over from Frsky to Jeti last year. For me it was like entering a new world. I had a Taranis and it seemed to me more like a toy rather than a device to control a €3'000+ plane but the main reason is/was hardware quality. The Frsky receivers do not have the same HW quality - by far not. The antennas are mounted to the board very weak and come off very very easily.
ReplyDeleteI am super happy with my Jeti. I still do have a Frsky remote set (TWIN X-Lite) for my cheap models that are going into my backpack.
That’s a pretty funny comparison. In terms of look and feel, a FrSky Taranis is a dinosaur—it doesn't hold a candle to the new generation of X20 transmitters. If you ask me, your comparison misses the mark entirely. The new X20 series, combined with TD or TW receivers, completely obliterates the value proposition Jeti dares to offer. Of course, a Jeti user would never admit that; they didn’t pay a massive premium for nothing. They bought a high-quality, beautiful product, but—and yes, you read that right—they simply paid way too much for it.
DeleteThanks a lot for this comparison – very interesting!
ReplyDeleteI was using Frsky till last year but than switched over to Jeti. Frsky has kind of this feeling of a toy rather than a device to steer a €3’000 plane. The main difference -. I think – is hardware. Not the TX, more the RX. They are cheaper built and do have a lower quality. Mainly the antenna is an issue, which is not very well attached to the board. They come off very easily.
I still do have a Frsky (Twin lite) for my smaller and cheaper planes that need to fit into a backpack for the mountains.
But overall, I am very very happy with the Jeti.
A noter que Radiomaster vient de sortir tout une panoplie de capteurs de télémétrie : capteur de courant, tension lipos par éléments, altimètre, gps ( était sortie plus tôt) - qui viennent compléter les fonctions de tension de la batterie sur tous leurs recepteurs, et le vario des versions GV.
ReplyDeletellevo mas de 10 años volando veleros con FrSky , casi todos por aqui nos cambiamos a FrSky, cero problemas ,sobre todo con fuselajes de carbono, ahora con Ethos mejor aun con X20 R rx TW el no vamas
ReplyDelete