@mestreemdrone: Unboxing + PRIMEIRO VOO do SC6S Mini com GPS! Drone baratinho que tá chamando atenção de quem quer começar no hobby… mas será que vale a pena? 🤔 Testei na prática e te mostro tudo! 👉 Se curtir e quiser garantir o seu, é só clicar no produto que tá aqui no vídeo 👆 💬 Me conta: você começaria com esse drone ou iria direto pra um mais profissional? #drones6s #droneiniciante #dronebarato #gpsdrone

Mestre em drone
Mestre em drone
Open In TikTok:
Region: BR
Thursday 16 April 2026 14:08:07 GMT
1026
17
4
2

Music

Download

Comments

leonardosoledade08
ElSURICATO :
meu primeiro drone com GPS ótimo para iniciantes
2026-04-16 14:50:38
1
barechy
Barechy :
Comprei um por 620, perdi no meu mesmo dia pois esqueci de ligar o GPS, no outro dia comprei outro por 580, daqui uns 7 meses quando eu conhecer melhor, comprar um Mini 5 ou Mini 4 kkk
2026-05-02 02:41:23
0
To see more videos from user @mestreemdrone, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Most swimmers who do the fist drill are waiting for it to end. What’s often overlooked is that the drill only works if it is done slowly enough to actually feel what it is trying to show, and most swimmers blast through it at normal pace and learn nothing. The fist drill closes the hand completely, removing the palm as a propulsive surface. The forearm has to take over. When done at speed, the body compensates quickly, the stroke adjusts automatically, and the swimmer finishes the length having experienced a slightly awkward version of their normal stroke. The moment the hands open again, everything returns to exactly what it was before. Done slowly, with genuine attention, the drill produces something different. Without the palm, the forearm becomes the primary point of contact with the water. The swimmer can feel where pressure is building and where it is not, which direction the forearm is facing, whether the elbow is high enough to make the forearm useful. This is information that is always present in normal swimming but masked by the larger surface area of the open hand. The transition is where the real learning happens. Open the hand mid-length, mid-stroke, without changing anything else. If the feel for the water suddenly improves dramatically, the forearm was not engaged before. If it feels roughly continuous, the forearm was already doing its share of the work. That comparison, fist to open hand in a single stroke, teaches more about the catch than any amount of thinking about it. The drill is not about swimming with fists. It is about what the hands feel when they open again. Technical fact: The fist drill eliminates palmar propulsive surface, transferring force generation demand to the forearm. At slow speeds with attentional focus, the drill develops tactile sensitivity to forearm pressure and orientation during the catch and pull phases. Research on skill acquisition in swimming confirms that reduced-speed practice with attentional focus accelerates proprioceptive development more effectively than full-speed drill repetition. Close the hands to find the forearm. Open them to feel the difference.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
Most swimmers who do the fist drill are waiting for it to end. What’s often overlooked is that the drill only works if it is done slowly enough to actually feel what it is trying to show, and most swimmers blast through it at normal pace and learn nothing. The fist drill closes the hand completely, removing the palm as a propulsive surface. The forearm has to take over. When done at speed, the body compensates quickly, the stroke adjusts automatically, and the swimmer finishes the length having experienced a slightly awkward version of their normal stroke. The moment the hands open again, everything returns to exactly what it was before. Done slowly, with genuine attention, the drill produces something different. Without the palm, the forearm becomes the primary point of contact with the water. The swimmer can feel where pressure is building and where it is not, which direction the forearm is facing, whether the elbow is high enough to make the forearm useful. This is information that is always present in normal swimming but masked by the larger surface area of the open hand. The transition is where the real learning happens. Open the hand mid-length, mid-stroke, without changing anything else. If the feel for the water suddenly improves dramatically, the forearm was not engaged before. If it feels roughly continuous, the forearm was already doing its share of the work. That comparison, fist to open hand in a single stroke, teaches more about the catch than any amount of thinking about it. The drill is not about swimming with fists. It is about what the hands feel when they open again. Technical fact: The fist drill eliminates palmar propulsive surface, transferring force generation demand to the forearm. At slow speeds with attentional focus, the drill develops tactile sensitivity to forearm pressure and orientation during the catch and pull phases. Research on skill acquisition in swimming confirms that reduced-speed practice with attentional focus accelerates proprioceptive development more effectively than full-speed drill repetition. Close the hands to find the forearm. Open them to feel the difference.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

About