That's funny, I didn't think I would see this here. I actually have met the owner (Alex) and he is quite the smart guy. He is one of the big innovators of FPV and antenna design. He is super nice too, quite genuine if I may say so. If you got a question just send it over, they are a proud US company and have a great staff. For FPV guys I really, REALLY must suggest you move away from those AIO cameras. It really ruins the experience versus a proper cam and vtx. Team Black Sheep makes the best VTXs around, have warranties, smaller, have more features, etc. Cameras should go with a CMOS sensor (CCD used to be #1 but CMOS these days is great) like a Caddx cam or even a Foxeer. Runcam makes good cameras but the colors tend to be very flat to me, just do your research here, most can make changes like color/saturation/brightness/etc. Combine that with a proper antenna, actually from the same guy as above, Video Aerial Systems, and your range and breakup will be much better. While the cheap AIOs do work, they don't work well and are pretty limited on power/quality just due to the price point. Also a set of goggles while expensive will make your experience a hundred times different. It isn't the same as a screen, you are actually immersed. YOU are now the commander AND driver at once. With a screen you will never get the same feeling. The hard part is drinking the koolaid for a set of goggles. They aren't cheap (mine were $450) and you don't want to go cheap and buy twice. These days there is digital HD FPV if you want to spend about $600-700ish which honestly I would recommend over the analog stuff if you are thinking about it. Analog is cheap but HD is HD. Once you see it you won't want to go back. Analog deals better with interference, but if you are doing tank battles and such I would go with the DJI HD FPV system.