There is a fine line between having enough wind to go Blokarting and too much for a small tricopter!
After changing the Gopro lens for a Ragecam 6mm, I shot a few minutes of karting at Mt Mauganui, New Zealand. A dark and overcast winter afternoon, just before the rain poured down.
The mount isn't stabilized - I left the good stuff at home. While I like the fov from the 6mm lens, it is too soft in the edges. If I want to shoot better, I'll shoot with the better tools but as I said, this was all I had with me.
Pete
The lens looks good I think, the GoPro is challenged no matter what you do with it but changing the lens really does make a difference. Never seen blocarts before though in my part of the world we have something similar for frozen lakes in the winter, just on skate blades instead of tires!
Wind is something we deal with continually with the multis and I've finally got a setup that works about as well as you can ask for, still have a bit of tweaking to do on the mount settings but the GPS is working as well as it possibly can, here's a quick test of GPS position hold I did at the end of last week from my front yard. A bit breezy as you can see from the tree tops on the way up, and the shifting horizon at altitude is the result of the MK compensating for the wind which you can hear in the soundtrack. Shot from my Droidworx AD-6 heavy lifter using a GoPro HD with Sunex lens, you can see the major drawback to the GoPro as the cam tilts down and then back up, its inability to deal well with changing light conditions, but as you say for better quality use better equipment, I'll be trying out my Canon Vixia camcorder next.
I was quite happy with the way the MK held location considering the conditions, once I got off the ground I set GPS position hold and vario altitude control and let it climb slowly straight up, hands off the control sticks. When I figured I had burnt half my battery capacity I simply lowered the throttle until it started drifting back down. A bit of jello near the end as I had to make a couple quick adjustments to make sure I came down in the somewhat small obstacle free opening between the trees, power poles, electric lines, etc...
P.S. that extremely flat gray horizon is the Atlantic ocean approximately 15 miles to the east of the house
Ken