ianwood
Taco Wrangler
If you take off in ATTI then switch to GPS once you are in the air wouldn't that be ok?
It won't make a difference.
If you take off in ATTI then switch to GPS once you are in the air wouldn't that be ok?
It won't make a difference.
Why not? Surely the compass will be fine away from metal?
A compass can't report that, only gps can. All a compass has the ability to do is report which way north is...... the compass may start reporting that it is a long way from where it thinks it was at take off...... "
A compass can't report that, only gps can. All a compass has the ability to do is report which way north is.
It won't, because the error induced by taking off from metal is now the base point for all of the location calculations. When it is away from the metal and that interference is not longer effecting the calculations, the compass may start reporting that it is a long way from where it thinks it was at take off, or traveling in an incorrect orientation to actual orientation. I believe this is one of the primary causes of "fly-a-ways"
Hey Andy nice location. You could use the P3 to spot fish!I took off from a metal boat a couple of weeks ago. Before doing that, I checked with some knowledgeable folks including a DJI insider on if I could do that and what I should do to prevent a fly away.
The recommendation was to not calibrate the P3 on the ship. I was told by the DJI insider that calibrating 150 miles away on land was sufficient.
When I started the P3, I held it above my head to put some distance between the metal deck and the P3. I then placed it on a wooden table where I launched it.
To make sure everything was ok, after launching I let it hover about 10 feet above the deck for a minute to make sure it was stable and then flew over the water.
I had two flights on two separate days with no problems. Here are a couple of shots from those flights.
View attachment 33368View attachment 33369
I just can't work out why, when the P3P gets all this incorrect data, it just decides, rather then staying happily where it is, to zoom off somewhere else.
Has it been programmed to do this?
Surely it could have programming that told it to ... 'stay put and obey RC signals' ... when it gets scrambled data. Of all the possible options, I think that the very worst option is ... "fly quickly away from operator until crash".
It was a steel hulled ship and I was using GPS.Hey Andy nice location. You could use the P3 to spot fish!
Was the boat mainly steel, fiberglass or aluminum? Or a combo?
GPS or Atti?
Cheers.
I had big compass problems on a p3 the other day taking off from both the bridge of a large cargo ship, and unsuccessfully from the dock about 20m from it. It initially didn't display any compass warnings before takeoff from the bridge, but once in the air and about 30m away it did, so I switched to ATTI expecting it to fly fine without using compass, but it still influenced it. There was an ever increasing backwards drift, and the gimbal started rolling all over the place with movement so it got brought back in pretty quick. Not the best thing out over the sea. Got it job done by flying from 200m back which had no issues, even when flying within 30m of the ship.
Ian, I have really appreciated your input throughout this thread. Could I trouble you for your expert opinion as to how the video I posted was shot with the Inspire 1? How did take off and how was it flying rock solid amongst all that ferrous material? This simply puzzles me.This is a good example. The gimbal uses compass data to determine orientation. The only option when metal is nearby is to get the Phantom as far away from it as possible before turning it on and then keeping it away from metal at all times while it is on.
Ian, I have really appreciated your input throughout this thread. Could I trouble you for your expert opinion as to how the video I posted was shot with the Inspire 1? How did take off and how was it flying rock solid amongst all that ferrous material? This simply puzzles me.
The full video (not posted in this thread) shows multiple take offs from the concrete flooring (rebar?) with flight paths amongst metal beams. I shall try to get some more info from the pilot himself on this shoot, but he may not reply how he did it! But many thanks for your input.It's not impossible to stay in control in a tricky environment. But most likely they avoided magnetic interference when calibrating and when taking off. That is when the FC defines parameters it will use for the whole flight.
You can encounter it in the air but if you avoid it in these two situations, you can most likely get away from wherever you're encountering it in the air.
How?The compass has a whole lot more to do with location than where north is.
How?
"Just because" doesn't work here. Please answer the question:Scroll up and read my whole post that begins that way, not just the line quoted
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