I've just been doing a range comparison between a 27mhz and a 2.4Ghz set as part of an examination into Taycol motor interference. It will take some time to go through all the tests I want to make, and then I'll write it up for the Taycol website, but I thought people might be interested in some initial findings.
I took a board, bolted a battery, three different Taycol motors which had particularly bad sparking, two receivers, an ESC and a servo to it, and walked it to different distances while observing. I used cheap radios (Futaba Attack and Radiolink T4U) and the dreaded 'blue' esc to try and get a 'worst-case' situation. I was able to switch inductors and capacitors in and out of connection in order to observe their effects....
I noticed the following points:
1 - I needed an inductor in the power line immediately for the worst of the Taycols - line-born interference was sufficient to stop the esc working properly. An inductor on each line completely cured that.
2 - the 27mhz link was fairly glitchy at all times. Capacitors improved this somewhat, but things got steadily worse as I moved away. Control was pretty ineffective and jittery at 400ft, which I counted as maximum range. That seems low, and I will do more work on this.
3 - positioning of the aerial made quite a difference to the 27Mhz system.
4 - the 2.4Ghz system was unaffected by radio interference - even when I positioned the aerial directly against the motor. I still needed an inductance to keep the esc working.
5 The 2.4Ghz system operated smoothly and effectively without any capacitors on the motor at a good range. I was in a set of fields around 2500ft long with a hill at 1750ft away. The radio functioned well up to the top of this hill, and fairly far down the other side, though this was out of direct line of sight. It stopped responding at about 2200ft (this was, of course with a hill in the way). This is about 730 yards - about 0.4 miles. I suspect that if I had line of sight, or if it was in the air it would have operated a lot further. This was with an aerial lying flat behind a large metal engine.
I don't know what people expect from a radio at ground range. But I think the furthest distance I have ever operated a boat at has been about 1000 ft. It seems to me that the cheap Radiolinks do quite a good job of operating at distance...