I'm not sure if I should be asking you guys or an RC community, but I think I'll get the right answer (hopefully!) here.
The device is an AlienWii, a hard to get experimental brushed Arduino flight controller board for a micro quadcopter that runs off of a 1S LiPo battery, and I can't get my mind off of this because I take very good care of my things.
A link to the board:
http://micro-motor-warehouse.com/products/alien-fcConnected to it are:
four 7x20mm brushed coreless motors
http://micro-motor-warehouse.com/collections/7mm-custom-builds/products/cl-0720-14 +
Lemon Rx DSM2 satellite receiver
http://www.lemon-rx.com/shop/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=98So here's the mistake I made: I had the quadcopter plugged into a USB 3.0 port on my PC but not the battery, and while it was connected to the PC via micro USB, I armed the board and gave the motors throttle (for tuning purposes). I don't recall if the board had any hiccups the first time I did it. I have since used it many times and had no issues. However today I did it again, I had it running for about 3-4 seconds on about 30% throttle and it froze the "MultiWiiConf" program that is used to configure it via a PC. Stupid me, I went and did it AGAIN, and it froze a second time, and one of the LEDs on the board dimmed for a moment. That is when I did some digging and found that I shouldn't be doing this.
So my worry comes from the fact that the board and motors are designed to run off of a 1S (3.7v nominal) LiPo battery, and is to be configured via the 5v micro USB port, but is not (according to the guy who distributes these boards, but does not assemble or design them) to be powering these motors off of the USB port. I wish there was a warning somewhere. So with my very limited understanding of these components, I think I may have damaged the Mosfets or some other components? The board still works so far, but I'm not even getting close to pushing it like the 8.5mm motors I want to put on it in the future. Also, I'm not worried about damage to my computer, and I understand that those freezes could have been from the drop in voltage due to the USB port being unable to deliver enough amps.
Thanks to anyone who helps me find peace of mind, this is just one of those things that sits in the back of my mind. I love the cute little thing.
Pictures for fun or reference:


