With how close to being done I was, I really had a hard time sleeping last night and just got up and powered through the 14.8v wiring and ESC extensions till about 3am.
After a lot of reading I decided that it was best to extend the signal wires, and not the ESC power. I did read though that it's said if you add some caps to the ESC power extensions and then it's fine. When I was recovering the ESC's I noticed that they have a cap on the input and I probably would not have had any issues. That being said I decided partly for aesthetic reasons and partly for protection I wanted the ESCs closer to the hub.
Wiring up the tail ESC extensions. Here I'm finishing up the third signal wire to the tail motor.
Once I had each wire soldered up and shrink wrapped, I covered all three with one more shrink wrap and routed it around the boom, attachting it with some small zip ties. Of course on the back boom they all had to be yellow.
For the front two I only had white laying around, once I can get back to Harbor Freight I'll be swapping all those out with black.
Rinse and repeat for all three booms. On the front boom the ESC is on the bottom, and on the front two booms they are on the backs.
Here I'm wrapping up boom #3. All three signal wires are done and I'm just about to shrink wrap the set and tie it up.
A shot down the right boom, nice and clean.
Under the rear boom.
Under the hub, 14.8v volt wiring complete. Battery mounted up and main XT60 connection easy to get to. I guess I didn't get a picture of the 14.8v distribution under the hood. I just took a length of wire, cut it in the center and pulled the insulation to the sides to expose some bare wire. So you've got a bare tip, insulation, then a bare center, insulation, and finally the other bare tip. Then I fluxed and tinned the center and both ends, soldered each front boom ESC negative to the ends, and soldered the rear boom ESC and main battery negative power to the center. This way you have even power distribution to all three ESCs. Repeat for the positive wiring. Then I used some shrink wrap to insulate it, dabbed some hot glue on the delrin and pressed the junction into place. I then put some hot glue on top of the insulated junction and pressed the next junction on top of it. When that was set up, I filled all the gaps with more hot glue so both are totally insulated and anchored. Make sure when you lay out the wires and locations to glue it down you consider that the booms have to fold. There needs to be enough play in the set up to allow both booms to extended/fold without straining the wires or pinching any other wire nearby. Next time I have it apart I'll try to get a pic of the belly.
Top of the hub. GoPro temp mounted for pics, I'll need to figure out some sort of vibration mount once I get an idea of what the video quality is like.