I would just say the further the better but my own personal experience I had a compass error at 170 metres before it fell so I have no idea to be honestI have to ask at this point, is there a rule of thumb in terms of distance and mass for avoidance of metal that throw the compasses off? Or do we just sort of wing it and hope for the best?
I have to ask at this point, is there a rule of thumb in terms of distance and mass for avoidance of metal that throw the compasses off? Or do we just sort of wing it and hope for the best?
One other possibility.... churches have been approached by cell service provider to host cell sites within their tall structures. This provides a hidden antenna platform for the providers and a revenue stream for the churches. Is it possible that this aircraft fell victim to EMI?
First, you don't need to be cautious of metal.I have to ask at this point, is there a rule of thumb in terms of distance and mass for avoidance of metal that throw the compasses off? Or do we just sort of wing it and hope for the best?
As explained above, no man-made object has a magnetic field that would have any effect on your Phantom at 170 metres.I had a compass error at 170 metres before it fell
Neither - I suggest that you follow the advice that I posted in #34; check that the aircraft orientation arrow on the map agrees with the actual direction the aircraft is facing. If it does then you are almost certainly not in an area of magnetic distortion. If it doesn't then don't take off - move the aircraft to another location and check again.
It's really scary knowing that this things can suddenly turned into such behaviour. Knowing that ATTI in this situation might be salvageable measure to some extent makes me a little less worry.
But what use of ATTI if AC is only a spot in the sky after a few hundreds meters or even less than that and you not have the compass data to bring the bird home? At least you must know to which direction it is heading to.
And if you want to look for unseen metal below the surface of your take off area, try using a smart phone tesla meterExcellent. Thanks.
That's how we train. We even simulate it for our pilots to train the ATTI reaction when there is a loss of control.If it was a compass problem then switching to ATTI would have eliminated the problem.
I've only experienced similar issues when flying in a boat repair yard. The AC was a bit wonky when near or between metal buildings. I didn't experience take-off/landing issues as I was able to set up away from the buildings. Otherwise, once I was well above the metal structures, things seemed normal.
I've seen crash videos where the AC suddenly went haywire in the air, often after several minutes of flight, sometimes clear of structures, other times nearby one or more structures - a multi-story building for example. In a lot of these cases, the pilots blamed the loss of control on metal influence from the take-off site. As the AC had flown normally from the take-off site, I'm not sure I understand why any metal on or around the area of take-off would influence the flight several minutes out.
Been there, done that, 3 years ago, with a P3P on early FW. I killed the motors to stop it from cartwheeling off the roof onto concrete, after it ran into the roof deck in a strong left hook immediately after launch from below. Luckily, only the props were damaged. The wooden table top I launched from concealed a metal firebowl and steel legs. Aircraft arrow pointer was facing the wrong direction before takeoff. Lessons learned!The only time I experienced radical flight at take off was when I took off from a picnic table that had steel legs. The table was in the middle of a large field. The drone was unable to stabilize or hover immediately after takeoff. I had to fly it into the ground.
You were in P-GPS mode, also known as GPS-Atti mode, not ATTI mode. That means that the FC is attempting to control the aircraft location - holding position when sticks are centered or holding track according to heading and elevator/aileron inputs. So it is combined pilot/FC control.
The compass error affects the FC control because the FC has incorrect information on the aircraft heading, and so corrections to maintain position or heading don't have the expected outcome - it applies thrust in the wrong direction.
Depending on the magnitude of the compass error, that can result in various uncontrolled flight patterns, including the toilet bowl spiral that you observed. The error also shows up clearly in the increasing discrepancy between the IMU-computed position vs. the actual GPS location as the flight progresses:
View attachment 96906
If you switch to ATTI mode then the FC stops trying to correct and the problem goes away - you are just left with the problem of correcting for wind-induced drift yourself and, of course, dealing with the different flight characteristics of ATTI mode.
The best way to ensure that this doesn't happen is to check that the aircraft orientation arrow on the map at takeoff is pointing in the same direction as the actual aircraft orientation. In this case the arrow will have been pointing around 30° south of the actual orientation, which was around NE.
The best way to ensure that this doesn't happen is to check that the aircraft orientation arrow on the map at takeoff is pointing in the same direction as the actual aircraft orientation. In this case the arrow will have been pointing around 30° south of the actual orientation, which was around NE.
That is also completely consistent with my take aways, after a resulting crash from such a mismatch of compass orientation displayed in the app, just before takeoff.That is a very informative summary. And great tip about the orientation arrow. Tks
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