got mine installed and they work sweet!!!!
I get all my Multi Rotor stuff from Aerial Media ProsCool Where did you order it from?
I get all my Multi Rotor stuff from Aerial Media Pros
I get all my Multi Rotor stuff from Aerial Media Pros
Thank you Where is Aerial media Pros location?
Aerial Media Pro's
3183 Airway Ave. Suite E
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
888-557-6791
Hello,
Is anyone experiencing too much vibration with the new retractable gear?
There's too much play in the legs compared to the fixed one, not to mention there are no struts to retain the legs like the fixed gear.
The vibration is so intense that it's messing up the IMU.
Any potential mods to make it sturdier?
Many thanks for any suggestion.
Lower the gains a little.
i got the best
170 170 140 150
140 140
Thanks i'll try that!
Although i followed the Wookong's chart which recommends 240 220 etc... for a complete rig with the z15
Does your setup include the z15? Did you reinforce the arms?
I don't understand why you guys want to spend all that money on a function that has little or no useful purpose. You have rudder control so why carry additional weight and problems to create a shot that nobody needs. The biggest mistake made by amateur cameramen is over use of the fast pan movement.
I hear what you're saying Denny and I'm sure your crews are much more skilled than our motley ragtag collection of misfits. We work a pretty unique niche without a lot of competition and our approach is giving us what we need and letting us pay the bills. I appreciate learning from you mavens who have been flying 3D and building helis when I was still trying to figure out how to solder properly. Oh, and I love your prop adapters. Thanks for all you do for the community.If you work correctly with pilot and camera operator and plan how you will shoot the sequence the pilot just needs to keep the heading of the model pointed in the general direction of the shot, If the pilot cant stay within 30 deg. of the target then I think you need another pilot. The guys I fly with are all 3D heli pilots, they can fly in any orientation, backwards, forwards, sideways it makes no difference. The pilot creates the movement and the camera operator should use as little input as possible and allow the camera stabilisation to work at it's most efficient. Locked-in means that you don't waive the camera about just for the sake of it when you can move the model to make the track. The human eye does not like to watch that because it has it's own stabilisation system that is pretty amazing. If you move the camera at more than 5 deg. per. sec. you just lost that part of the shot. You have blurred the pixels. A good editor will not use it. Nor will he normally use a sequence that is more than 5-10 seconds long. A sequence that follows a target up and down and all over the place is known as hose piping. It is simply not done...