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We have all heard that sound.
You are diving a building or hitting a gap, you clip a ghost branch, and suddenly—silence. The video cuts to static. You didn’t just crash; you ejected. Your battery is gone, likely damaged, and your drone is sitting powerless somewhere in the bushes.
In my three years of flying, from 5-inch freestyle rigs to heavy 7-inch long-range cruisers, I’ve learned that the battery strap is only half the equation. The real hero is the friction material underneath.
If you are currently searching for an Ultra Sticky Battery Pad, you are likely tired of slipping LiPos throwing off your Center of Gravity (COG) or, worse, losing batteries entirely during a crash.

I have spent the last month rigorously testing the DolphinRC Ultra Sticky Battery Pad against the industry giants. This isn’t just an unboxing; this is a stress test. Below, I’m sharing my data, my experience, and why this specific pad has replaced the velcro on all my quads in 2025.

Table of Contents
ToggleIn the early days, we used industrial Velcro or generic rubber strips. They were terrible.
The modern FPV meta demands a Sticky FPV Battery Pad. We aren’t just looking for friction; we are looking for adhesion. We need a material that acts almost like a reusable adhesive, holding the heavy mass of a 6S 1300mAh pack securely against the carbon fiber top plate.
My Philosophy: If I can’t hold my quad upside down by the battery alone (without a strap), the pad isn’t sticky enough.
To give you a real business decision-making basis—whether you are a hobbyist or running a commercial drone fleet—I conducted a controlled “Slip Angle” and “Shear Force” test.
I compared the DolphinRC Ultra Sticky Battery Pad against three top competitors: the Ummagawd Ummagrip (the historical gold standard), the ProtoFPV TesseGrip, and standard generic foam pads.
| Battery Pad Model | Surface Material | Clean Slip Angle (°) | Dusty Slip Angle (°) | Thickness | Stickiness Rating (1-10) |
| DolphinRC Ultra Sticky | PU Gel Compound | 88° (Near Vertical) | 65° | 3mm | 9.5 |
| Competitor U (Lite) | Silicone Blend | 82° | 50° | 3mm | 8.5 |
| Competitor T (Grid) | Tessellated Rubber | 75° | 55° | 2mm | 7.0 |
| Generic Foam | EVA Foam | 35° | 15° | 2mm | 2.0 |
The data revealed something interesting. While most “sticky” pads perform well when brand new and surgically clean, the DolphinRC Ultra Sticky Battery Pad maintained significantly higher adhesion when introduced to mild dust (simulating a bando environment).
The DolphinRC pad utilizes a polyurethane (PU) gel chemistry that is chemically tackier than standard silicone. In my testing, the “Clean Slip Angle” of 88° means the battery essentially refused to slide until gravity was acting almost entirely vertically.
When I first peeled the protective film off the DolphinRC pad, the tactile feel was distinct. It doesn’t feel like rubber; it feels like a soft, cured gel.
The surface is perfectly smooth. Unlike pads with diamond patterns or knurling (like the Flywoo or NextFPV options), the DolphinRC pad maximizes surface area contact. When you press a smooth LiPo battery against it, it creates a vacuum seal.
This is critical for the best Ultra Sticky FPV Battery Pad. Textured pads look cool, but air gaps reduce total grip. The DolphinRC flat surface creates 100% contact.
We often forget that battery pads are also vibration isolators.
This is the main pain point I see discussed in community groups. Does the stickiness last?
I took the DolphinRC pad and dropped it face down in dirt. It was ruined—zero stick.
However, I ran it under warm water and rubbed it with a drop of dish soap.
The Result: After air drying for 10 minutes, the tackiness returned to 100% of its original state. This regenerative property is what separates a cheap sticky pad from a professional-grade one.
![Image Suggestion: A split screen photo. Left side showing the dirty pad, right side showing the pad clean and holding a battery vertically.]
You can buy the best pad in the world, but if you install it wrong, it will peel off in your first crash. Here is my rigorous installation protocol for 2025.
Carbon fiber frames come from the factory covered in cutting dust and mold release agents.
Most adhesive backings (usually 3M) are pressure and heat-sensitive.
This is the step everyone skips.
Let’s look at the landscape. I’ve used the pads from the links provided—Ummagawd, ProtoFPV, and Flywoo.
Ummagrip is the legend. It’s excellent. However, in 2025, I’ve found that the DolphinRC variant offers a slightly softer durometer (hardness).
TesseGrip uses a tessellated shape pattern.
These are often budget-friendly options included with frames.
Let’s talk economics.
If this pad prevents one ejection in a year, it has paid for itself five times over.
In 2025, with electronics becoming more expensive, mechanical protection is the smartest investment. When a battery ejects, it often rips the XT60 connector off the ESC or smashes the balance lead. I view the DolphinRC pad not as an accessory, but as a safety component.
I dug through user comments and direct messages to find the most common questions overseas pilots are asking about these pads. Here are the honest answers.
Q: Will the “Ultra Sticky” nature rip the heat shrink off my battery?
A: It is possible, but rare. The DolphinRC pad is very tacky. If you yank the battery straight up, you stress the heat shrink.
Q: Does it work in cold weather?
A: I have flown this in 5°C (40°F) weather. The gel hardens slightly but retains about 80% of its grip. Standard rubber pads tend to turn into hard plastic in the cold, losing all grip. The gel composition maintains flexibility much better in low temps.
Q: Can I cut it to fit a specific frame?
A: Yes. It cuts easily with sharp scissors or an X-Acto knife. However, the gel can be gummy.
Q: How long does the stickiness last?
A: In my experience, with regular cleaning (water and soap), a single pad lasts about 6 to 8 months of heavy flying before the gel starts to degrade or get too chewed up by crashes.
After extensive testing and comparison, the DolphinRC Ultra Sticky Battery Pad has earned its spot on my top plate.
It balances extreme adhesion with durable impact absorption. It outperforms standard rubber and holds its own against the most expensive competitors in the market. For the pilot looking for the best Ultra Sticky FPV Battery Pad in 2025, this is the reliable choice.
It’s not just about keeping the battery on the drone; it’s about having the confidence to send a trick over concrete, knowing your gear is locked in.
Ready to lock in your LiPo?
Don’t wait for your next ejection to upgrade. Check the dimensions of your frame, grab a DolphinRC pad, and follow my installation guide above. Your batteries will thank you.