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Can you give a little more information do describe what you are seeing?I just started practicing with my new-to-me P4P v1.0. I noticed that when hovering the altitude drops and yet the altitude on the screen stays at the same numerical height. I looked through the manual and searched within the forum. Am I doing something wrong? Thanks.
Thanks for responding. I set the height for say 4 meters. When I either hover or practice maneuvers slowly, the actual height of the drone drops 25% or more. When I check the screen to see what the height is reading, it still says 4 meters. In GPS mode, 32 C, 29.90Hg, 28% humidity, clear skies.Can you give a little more information do describe what you are seeing?
The altitude shown on the screen comes form a sensor that measures air pressure.
It's quite sensitive and should show small (less than one foot) changes in height.
Hi John,I just started practicing with my new-to-me P4P v1.0. I noticed that when hovering the altitude drops and yet the altitude on the screen stays at the same numerical height. I looked through the manual and searched within the forum. Am I doing something wrong? Thanks.
Thanks. I am wondering if that pressure-based altimeter could use a cleaning. The drone has been in storage unused for years.Hi John,
I have made a lot of repetitive low level flights (2-4M agl) to monitor wheat and maize growth on a farm that conducts seed trials. My P4 often sank down slowly but I don't recall it flying higher than the programmed height. I thought that this height change could be caused by wind gusts confusing the air pressure sensor in the altimeter. I also assumed that the incompressible ground beneath the P4 effectively amplified the pressure changes caused by wind gusts. It would be interesting to experiment by hovering, in gusty conditions, at say 1,2,3 to 10M and see if the altitude changes only occur close to the ground. But I would be happy to learn more from someone more knowledgeable.
All the best, Martin
A few metres +/- drift over the duration of a flight is common and normal.Thanks for responding. I set the height for say 4 meters. When I either hover or practice maneuvers slowly, the actual height of the drone drops 25% or more. When I check the screen to see what the height is reading, it still says 4 meters. In GPS mode, 32 C, 29.90Hg, 28% humidity, clear skies.
What you're describing is the Terrain Follow Mode. In normal flight mode the downward vision positioning system maintains horizontal positioning only. If it were otherwise, maintaining stable flight below 10 metres would indeed be a challenge.I think that here is an another issue. If you fly less than 10m high the altitude is measured by the UZ sensor which measures the distance from the ground, thus the measured hight is the same all the time but the drone follows the UZ values so if the ground goes down the same will do the drone. Try to fly over 10m and you'll see.
The answer to this should prove very interesting.Have you tested the drone out over land to see if you experience the same issue?
Good point about the downward sensors. I should have mentioned that they were turned off - something I always do when flying low over water. Over solid ground the instability was still there. With those sensors turned off, it shouldn't make any difference what surface I'm flying over.Two suggestions... If you have the downward facing sensors turn on, turn them off. They can be very glitchy when flying over water where the reflective water surface messes up what they are seeing. The sensors will be especially problematic if flying over rapidly moving water as the sensor signal reflection is constantly changing. Have you tested the drone out over land to see if you experience the same issue? Also, the vertical up and down drifting will be much less noticeable if you play the video at normal speed.
How much was the drone moving vertically?I've just been testing a replacement drone that I received from DJI after sending my old one in for repair. It has trouble maintaining elevation - bobbing up and down
I would say occasionally outside that range, but mostly within it.How much was the drone moving vertically?
According to the specs, it's vertical hovering stability is ±0.5 m.
You could try recalibrating the IMU as that contains both the gyro sensors and the barometric sensor.I would say occasionally outside that range, but mostly within it.
It's not just the range that's a factor, that drone wouldn't stay still. I've sent up drones before and had them hover right in front of me while I fiddled with settings, and they've barely moved.
Do you know if it just the barometer that controls vertical stability, or does the accelerometer also come in to play?
I think it would be easier to just get a drone that holds it's position.You can always fix the vertical drift in video post.
Yeah, clicking the mouse button a couple of times can be very taxingI think it would be easier to just get a drone that holds it's position.![]()
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