I'm not sure of the question.Which brand model instrument is used to calculate barometric pressure?
What are its accuracy and repeatability?
Get a handheld GPS and experiment sometime.From what I gather the phantom uses a barometer to know it's altitude. It seems to me that GPS could give a much better indication of altitude. Any comments?
I'm not sure of the question.
Here is the spec sheet for a typical barometric sensor chip. [link].
The only spec we care about is the linearity. The barometer chips are expected to work typically to 60,000 ft, so the linearity of a couple of hundred feet is going to be pretty good. When you set your home point the relative altitude is set to zero. The atmospheric pressure or temperature ares unlikely to change much over the typical short flight, so for our kind of flight, the altimeter chip is pretty darned accurate.
Thank you for the GPS vertical explanation. I've seen that the altitude indicated on my iPad seems to be out one or two or 3 m even sitting on the ground before I take off. Is the home elevation set when the propellers are first turned on? I took off from a higher elevation and sent my phantom down the hill expecting to see perhaps a negative altitude but that didn't happen. Perhaps I didn't send it down far enough it was only about 5 m.
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