What are the chances the camera will separate?
It would help if I landed on rocks and one was sticking out or a stick or just rough terrain, this terrain could hit the camera.a good bump. You can see in video how easily it comes off. This is why I don't understand how a gimbal guard help.
Just about a month lolYeah, much cheaper and essentially the same. Ship from China. SO might take a while t get here.
Instead of using the "anti-drop" pin, use 4 zip ties (see picture attached below). Keep it loose so the white rubber dampener can function.
View attachment 39281
Zip ties are easier to remove then anti drop pins and provide more stability as you can use 4 zip ties instead of 2 anti drop pinsWhy do you recommend using zip ties? What advantages do they have to using anti drop pins?
Why do you recommend using zip ties? What advantages do they have to using anti drop pins?
Zip ties are easier to remove then anti drop pins and provide more stability as you can use 4 zip ties instead of 2 anti drop pins
Yesterday in my crash I broke one anti drop pinAnti drop pins are "weak" and breaks apart easily. It doesn't take much force.
So there are 2 school of thoughts on this:
In a "hard impact", do you want your camera unit to fly off your bird or do you want your camera to stay with your bird?
If your answer is former, then stay with the antidrop pin.
If your answer is later, use zip tie.
My thinking is this: if I suffer a collision with enough force to dislodge both antidrop pin, here the likely scenario:
The camera (hold together by magnetic field) will for sure separate from the vertical gimbal axis and ripping the flexable ribbon cable with it. The camera unit (with lens) would fly off in some random direction. Next the rest of the gamble unit would fly off somewhere. After flying off, both unit would presumably have hard impact of their own.
Or I can use a zip tie, the camera unit would come off regardless. The shock energy would transfer to the dampling plate and bending it. But the rest of the gimble unit would stay with the bird. The bird having already impacted would have a much reduced kinetic energy when it falls onto ground. Hopefully the gimbal unit is in that pseudo "cage" and I damage my landing skid instead.
Ribbon is about $60
The dampling plate is $9
The entire gimbal unit with camera is like around $500
Now, I suspect the anti drop pin won't survive even a 15 MPH collision much less 60 MPH. And you would have ruined a camera for a "relatively" slow collision.
In a real life 60MPH impact...here's what happened:
View attachment 39308 View attachment 39309 View attachment 39310 View attachment 39311 View attachment 39312
Anti drop pins are "weak" and breaks apart easily. It doesn't take much force.
So there are 2 school of thoughts on this:
In a "hard impact", do you want your camera unit to fly off your bird or do you want your camera to stay with your bird?
If your answer is former, then stay with the antidrop pin.
If your answer is later, use zip tie.
My thinking is this: if I suffer a collision with enough force to dislodge both antidrop pin, here the likely scenario:
The camera (hold together by magnetic field) will for sure separate from the vertical gimbal axis and ripping the flexable ribbon cable with it. The camera unit (with lens) would fly off in some random direction. Next the rest of the gamble unit would fly off somewhere. After flying off, both unit would presumably have hard impact of their own.
Or I can use a zip tie, the camera unit would come off regardless. The shock energy would transfer to the dampling plate and bending it. But the rest of the gimble unit would stay with the bird. The bird having already impacted would have a much reduced kinetic energy when it falls onto ground. Hopefully the gimbal unit is in that pseudo "cage" and I damage my landing skid instead.
Ribbon is about $60
The dampling plate is $9
The entire gimbal unit with camera is like around $500
Now, I suspect the anti drop pin won't survive even a 15 MPH collision much less 60 MPH. And you would have ruined a camera for a "relatively" slow collision.
In a real life 60MPH impact...here's what happened:
View attachment 39308 View attachment 39309 View attachment 39310 View attachment 39311 View attachment 39312
Shouldn't be. The camera may have been knocck out of alignment from previous crash. There are video teaching how to fix that.I am using zip ties instead of the anti drop pins and my camera is side ways?
Could you send one?Shouldn't be. The camera may have been knocck out of alignment from previous crash. There are video teaching how to fix that.
Thank you! Still have the problem of the range being terrible, since the crash. Any ideas?
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