N017RW
Premium Pilot
That is not exactly what it states. There is more mentioned then that. A person also needs to consider why the compass may need to be re-calibrated in order to apply that to what DJI mentions. The Phantom used magnetic north. If the Phantom changes location far enough (I'd say around 200 miles or so... especially east or west) that direction can change. This is why a re-calibration is needed.
Every time a person does something, something can be done incorrectly. Multiply that chance by the number of times you do it and collectively that chance increases. So if its not needed, I recommend you not be done/changed.
It's truly amazing that we have this exact same thread so many times, over and over again, each with effectively the exact same posts. I think this is the third compass calibration discussion in the last 5 days, one of which sprung from a checklist noting to calibrate every flight. Each discussion the same, with the same links to compass calibration info. Groundhog Day revisited.
The funny thing is that I continue to read them all, over and over again. Yes, I agree. Insanity.
The first step is admitting that I have a problem.
Adding or removing a component from the aircraft (especially an electronic one) is one of the few reasons one SHOULD do a compass calibration. By adding anything metallic to the aircraft (i.e. physically close to the compass module) you are changing the magnetic profile of the aircraft. The "compass dance" will teach the Phantom how to interpret magnetic north again, no matter its orientation.Riddle me this: do I really need to recalibrate my compass after I install my Trackimo? Seems counterintuitive to do so with the tracker installed, as consensus is to not have your phone in your pocket when you do a calibration. The Trackimo is essentially a little phone, so wouldn't that screw up the process?
Yes.
One of the often misunderstood purposes is to 'compensate out' all the fixed distortions from so-called soft and hard iron materials on the quad itself..
Aside from travel distances from last calibration place... compass compensation (calibration) for adding, removing, or relocating equipment on the craft is VERY important.
Post #22 above from ianwood.I asked this on another thread but can someone point me in the direction of an article or video that explains compass mod values and how you use them to determine an issue?
Yes I read that and it was very useful however didn't exactly explain the MOD value - sum of squares" from the X, Y and Z axes I get but what are those numbers telling us?Post #22 above from ianwood.
It's a single value description of the total magnetic field, and you are correct that it doesn't necessarily confirm a good calibration. It can, however, be a good indicator of a completely nonsensical calibration (like if you calibrate on a steel dock). Calibrating over some rebar may or may not result in an "out-of-bounds" mod value, but could result in an offset in the compass' ability to find magnetic north in some axis, resulting in erratic flight.Yes I read that and it was very useful however didn't exactly explain the MOD value - sum of squares" from the X, Y and Z axes I get but what are those numbers telling us?
Even that description comes with the caveat: A good mod value does NOT mean your compass is working and calibrated properly. For example, if you calibrate next to some rebar, your mod value may still be OK until you fly away from the rebar.
I'm new, so forgive me, but can we ever be 100% sure we have a good calibration until the point we have made a successful flight in a particular area?
Thanks for explaining it!Adding or removing a component from the aircraft (especially an electronic one) is one of the few reasons one SHOULD do a compass calibration. By adding anything metallic to the aircraft (i.e. physically close to the compass module) you are changing the magnetic profile of the aircraft. The "compass dance" will teach the Phantom how to interpret magnetic north again, no matter its orientation.
Before the all-in-one camera drone approach that DJI has embraced with the Phantoms and the Inspire, changing cameras, and removing FPV transmitters, and changing out other components was a much more common activity, and led to lots of compass calibrations. The difficulty of getting a good cal that didn't result in "toilet-bowl effect" or a random drift used to be just as common a topic on old 3DR related forums as these calibration threads are here.
It's truly amazing that we have this exact same thread so many times, over and over again, each with effectively the exact same posts. I think this is the third compass calibration discussion in the last 5 days, one of which sprung from a checklist noting to calibrate every flight. Each discussion the same, with the same links to compass calibration info. Groundhog Day revisited.
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