I flew my phantom a while ago and crashed it. Not bad but I broke a couple of props. I finally got some replacements in today and took my P2V out to a local park and flew it around for a bit. It flew fine. Suddenly it couldn't keep level and it slowly... about 5 feet per second... fell to the ground. It crashed and the battery flew out, the camera came off its mounts and the little ribbon connector popped off. No props broke. I think the camera came loose while flying. I didn't check it before todays flight which I should have because as I mentioned, it crashed the last time I flew it. I think that is what brought it down. Either way, it crashed and I had to put it back together.
Now, I got it all set up and powered up. I tried to do the compass thing which I've done quite a few times before with no problems. Now, the lights won't turn green. They just keep flashing yellow. So, I shut it down and power it back up. All seems fine. This time I decide to let it connect to the satellites. It won't connect to the satellites. I sit and wait and the little satellite symbol doesn't even register. Zero satellites.
I bring it home and open it up. No connectors are loose. I pull the gps connector off and plug it back in. (I used to work on radars in the Navy so I know how to unplug a connector for those who might caution me
) I check all the connectors and everything looks fine. I take it outside (with props removed) and start it up. No compass lock, no GPS lock. No green lights.
Any ideas on what I might do.
Thanks
Steve
Now, I got it all set up and powered up. I tried to do the compass thing which I've done quite a few times before with no problems. Now, the lights won't turn green. They just keep flashing yellow. So, I shut it down and power it back up. All seems fine. This time I decide to let it connect to the satellites. It won't connect to the satellites. I sit and wait and the little satellite symbol doesn't even register. Zero satellites.
I bring it home and open it up. No connectors are loose. I pull the gps connector off and plug it back in. (I used to work on radars in the Navy so I know how to unplug a connector for those who might caution me
Any ideas on what I might do.
Thanks
Steve