It's funny how the two top posters, one with an actual commercial business in the film industry are NOT using Herk boards.:tennis:
Great argument... love your science, dude
Got it down without any danger to persons or property and intact but found the workload high so never actually noticed that a prop was not turning but also did not expect an X4 to spin with 1 motor out.
I suspected it was due to a motor failure and looking at the data logger for the Herkules quickly confirmed that motor 7 dropped out during the hover and never came back. In fact the datalogger on the Herkules is so good it didn't take long to confirm that the fault was due to a signal loss for motor 7 between the WKM and the Herkules (probable bad connection) but i shall swap the motor out just in case.
I could have made life a little easier for myself if i had put the WKM into Home Lock so a lesson learned on that one, but any ideas why an X4 would spin with 1 motor out?
my AUW is 9.2Kg on Tiger 4014 400KV and 15X5 props, hover is 55% at AUW so i expected enough reserve power to correct a yaw. The WKM didn't seem to be able to correct it in GPS mode but i could hold the Yaw manually in Atti by applying opposite stick. (seven sats locked at the time) either my expectations are off or i need to hunt down an imbalance in the setup.
But it's not that much different than "it's expensive, so it must be good".
I didn't say you did, but it's a common argument, and I believe it's been used in regards to the Herkules. I'm just pointing out that there's a lot of anti-science in this industry.
Solder is fragile and will not indefinately hold up in a high vibration environment. When the solder terminates inside wire insulation is a natural brittle point in the wire and a well noted failure point in all things that have wire solder joints. We need a well engineer re-design of our PDB's that eliminate solder requirements, be they bullet connectors or direct soldering to the board.
You do realise that your "what if" scenarios will now be about 200% safer than before now you have had a motor out, as its something you don't think about until it happens to you.
This is why I CAN NOT understand these pilots who fly over people with a quad.
It will take time to get your confidence back in the machine, but after I had a motor go out on a Hex carrying a 5D on a Zenmuse, my train of thoughts changed completely regarding safety after it happened.
https://vimeo.com/87086309
You may have seen it before, here is it on video.
The good thing is you have a lot more confidence on a machine in the "what if" situation.
On the hex yaw control was almost completely lost, which would not be good on a windy day.
Well i know exactly what the issue is with the Herk, and it aint the Herk itself.
The problem is the Micro Match connectors which are clearly just not crimped properly, they are supplied loose and i thought i had crimped them properly (spent some time inspecting them as well) but not the case, i can replicate the drop outs by wiggling the cable around with the motors running on the test bench and after considerable wiggling a motor stops for a few seconds and the data logger logs motor status 480.000 which is a PPM control signal disconnect.
it would seem the Micro-match connectors need specialist tools so i will hunt down pre professionally terminated ribbon cables i think.
Unfortunately i had to cancel my assessment, not doing that until i know it is 100% and fortunately Resource UAS were brilliant about it.
Follow the Nasa guidelines on soldering or crimp connections, and it's not an issue.Take a look at FAA standards for aircraft electronics to determine the safety level of solder joints. As for bullets, you should not use them.
Take a look at FAA standards for aircraft electronics to determine the safety level of solder joints. As for bullets, you should not use them. Crimped connectors and twist locks (canon plugs) are the preferred aviation safety standard. Bayonet/slide mounts are also considered in the safe category if going board to board. Yea, @FerdinandK does some truly great stuff but he's not flying anything a life is dependent on. At least until he flies over people's heads.
BTW, another real crappy connector is the JST. It's one of the most corrosion prone connectors you can buy, especially when not gold plated. Great for your home desk top and other IT uses though. It's amazing that our primary connection choices are some of the worst that are available. They are among the cheapest though. I'm certain all of this will be corrected when the FAA finally dumps their airworthiness standards upon us. They've pretty much already made it plain they will be extending the current certification process to anything we want to fly commercially.
We need a well engineer re-design of our PDB's that eliminate solder requirements, be they bullet connectors or direct soldering to the board.
This is the bit that threw me
I worked as a CNC engineer years ago that made ejector seats for Martin Baker, a lot of the stuff I read in these forums I take with a pinch of salt.
I am fully qualified to fly commercially here in the UK, (one of the few countries that has got their act together) but its nothing to do with how good your machine is, its based on if you are capable of flying or not.
We still have a long way to go, regarding simple things like connectors.
Hence the reason pilots license required, that alone is going to weed out many.:tennis:That is how it should be. Some regulation over the parts we use i can understand, i don't want to see 10kg UAV's made of cardboard and tape holding a 1.5kg camera over my head... lol
Weed out the clear idiots that have NO IDEA what they are doing. Mostly make sure certified people have the proper knowledge/insurance.