A couple of months ago I experienced a very close call with my S-800. It suddenly began to swing violently from side to side and I thought it was going to flip. It was going through almost 90 degrees and I consider myself lucky that it did not. FYI it uses and A2 controller was in GPS mode and carries a DSLR on a 3-axis gimbal. At 30ft I gave it full power and it stabilised itself and then landed without issue.
I took it home, double-checked everything, recalibrated the compass and did a couple of test flights without incident. I then went back to the same location and exactly the same thing happened, i.e violent oscillations. It could be local interference or it could have been coincidence. No cell towers, radio masts or similar in the vicinity as far as I can see.
Any ideas?
Next thing. The gimbal appears to shake from side to side which initially I thought was a gimbal issue. However looking at it closely it’s not, the whole bird is shuddering and that is simply being transferred to the gimbal and camera.
I’ve uploaded a couple of short videos to illustrate the point. The camera view clearly shows the side to side movement and the ground video shows the oscillations/vibrations, most notably at 0:27, 0:29, and 0:31. Look at the ends of the arms, not the gimbal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3HyuvdoAGM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sf1GhdtDs_0&list=UUiCnqWzx70ca-HEcPh5EnnQ
I’ve tried adjusting the gains, which helps, but by the time they are reduced enough to remove the shudder you might as well be flying a wet blanket, it is far too slow to react. We are blessed (not) with quite gusty winds here so you need to keep the gains at a reasonably high level to cope with this.
I’ve tried several combinations of vibration dampers but I think the real problem is the movement in the bird itself. If this could be removed then it wouldn’t be an issue, as it wouldn’t be transferred to the camera.
So, all you techies, does anyone have any suggestions as to what might be causing the problem and what I can do to rectify it? If you do please let me know, and the next time you are in Barbados the drinks are one me!
Thanks.
I took it home, double-checked everything, recalibrated the compass and did a couple of test flights without incident. I then went back to the same location and exactly the same thing happened, i.e violent oscillations. It could be local interference or it could have been coincidence. No cell towers, radio masts or similar in the vicinity as far as I can see.
Any ideas?
Next thing. The gimbal appears to shake from side to side which initially I thought was a gimbal issue. However looking at it closely it’s not, the whole bird is shuddering and that is simply being transferred to the gimbal and camera.
I’ve uploaded a couple of short videos to illustrate the point. The camera view clearly shows the side to side movement and the ground video shows the oscillations/vibrations, most notably at 0:27, 0:29, and 0:31. Look at the ends of the arms, not the gimbal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3HyuvdoAGM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sf1GhdtDs_0&list=UUiCnqWzx70ca-HEcPh5EnnQ
I’ve tried adjusting the gains, which helps, but by the time they are reduced enough to remove the shudder you might as well be flying a wet blanket, it is far too slow to react. We are blessed (not) with quite gusty winds here so you need to keep the gains at a reasonably high level to cope with this.
I’ve tried several combinations of vibration dampers but I think the real problem is the movement in the bird itself. If this could be removed then it wouldn’t be an issue, as it wouldn’t be transferred to the camera.
So, all you techies, does anyone have any suggestions as to what might be causing the problem and what I can do to rectify it? If you do please let me know, and the next time you are in Barbados the drinks are one me!
Thanks.