Archive for December, 2006
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Views: 460
Copter brain connected to programming harness. The servo inputs are currently connected to the programmer by a 4 pin ribbon cable. -
Views: 390
Copter brain should hopefully not require much more than this. -
Views: 435
The plan for copter brain. -
Views: 352
The servo inputs are shared with the programming pins so this connector is going to go straight into the receiver.
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Views: 412
Just the proto board+ oscillator for the autopilot is a nihilistic 37g. Need to weigh as many parts as possible before unloading on the IMU. -
Views: 376
Being just a prototype camera platform with no weight optimization, the 4 legged monster was 164g. With the camera, the total was 390g. At that weight, the rotor speed was 1700rpm and the Mega 16/15/4 got too hot to touch.
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Views: 398
Holding the Magorator in the viewfinder by viewfinder alone. -
Views: 344
Nose-in operation. -
Views: 314
Frosty the copter with dead battery. -
Views: 343
Another viewfinder hold. The camera battery couldn't be kept warm enough to shoot all the the FPV operations. -
Views: 379
Frosty the copter with dead battery.
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Views: 406
The GWS receiver is a marvel of miniaturization. -
Views: 322
The GWS receiver is a marvel of miniaturization. -
Views: 345
An 18 year old Airtronics antenna is swapped in for the GWS antenna. -
Views: 366
This Airtronics dinosaur went all the way to the tail. -
Views: 315
Reinstalled the stock 1/4 wavelength antenna and enclosed the Astak transmitter in more protection. -
Views: 276
The latest transmitter assembly. Had very good results with it. No signal loss in any orientation within 20ft of the receiver. -
Views: 301
The test flight involved keeping the flightbox in the viewfinder as long as possible. -
Views: 353
Extreme frost. U name the country.
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Views: 1700
Today's test flight used landing platform 9 + a pylon mounted collinear antenna. -
Views: 325
The pylon mounted antenna was the only remaining reason for using a landing platform. -
Views: 277
The platform had a tapered opening in back to try to simplify the approach. -
Views: 325
The Astak camera was pointed down to get translation movement. -
Views: 304
The pylon only contains an antenna. -
Views: 333
The receiving antenna was rested on the flight box for this one but already showed extreme polarization. -
Views: 316
The camera showed a clear picture of grass. -
Views: 297
On the first landing attempt, pulled back on the cyclic after some failed attempts and the tail hit the ground, damaging the fore tail gears again.
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Views: 466
Smaller, lighter landing platform. -
Views: 383
1/4" MDF was risky but proved strong enough. -
Views: 352
The payload was so short compared to the pylon, the landing approach had to be just 2" above the deck. Much harder than the 1' pylon whose approach could be 6" above the deck. -
Views: 384
[email protected]?!?!?! WE'RE GOING TO LAND ON [email protected]!?!?!
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Views: 433
For this pylon test, made the landing platform out of wood. Took an extra trip to the field to assemble the landing platform. -
Views: 416
Shorter pylon than test #1. -
Views: 390
This pylon was supposed to eliminate sympathetic oscillation by being stiffer. Still had sympathetic oscillation. -
Views: 381
Mechanism to attach the pylon to the skids. -
Views: 344
This view of Jack Crossfire from the copter shows the effect of The Sanyo's scanline shutter. The top of the frame was scanned 1 vibration before the bottom of the frame, producing a wave in the vertical line. -
Views: 417
One last sword view.
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Views: 482
FPV in the field. -
Views: 397
That summarizes the Astak flying experience without the interference. -
Views: 341
A unique view of the copter in the distance, nose in. -
Views: 444
Sword copter in flight. -
Views: 378
Better with the clouds visible. -
Views: 374
Sword copter in the clouds. -
Views: 407
The best way to check gear alignment. -
Views: 461
Sword, flash, and clouds. Flash definitely brings out the clouds.
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Views: 324
Step 1 was extracting composite video from The Sanyo. It's composite adaptor can't be disassembled. Instead, you need to grind squares into it like an archaeologist. -
Views: 285
Through luck and dead reckoning, managed to expose the vital connections. -
Views: 326
The trick to soldering these pins was sharpening and drying the iron as much as possible, tinning the wire not the pin, and pressing the side of the pin opposite to the wire when melting. -
Views: 287
Took 3 hours of grinding away solder bridges to learn that technique. Here we also soldered the DC power to eliminate a battery. -
Views: 350
9 hours later, the final video assist connections are made, if not ground down to their final size. -
Views: 298
Sadly, the speed controller didn't have enough horsepower to run the Sanyo. The Sanyo required moving the 2nd accessory connector from the ESC to the battery. -
Views: 310
The voltage converter for the Sanyo required a huge heatsink. The ESC gets so hot just when powering servos, the direct battery connection and its unwieldy voltage converters is unavoidable. -
Views: 409
The first wireless transmission from The Sanyo, powered by copter power. Sadly, it doesn't provide a widescreen viewfinder. Distortions are caused by the Astak receiver not being impedance matched to the video capture board.
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Views: 337
The camera is liberated from its cables. -
Views: 285
Freshly lubed and rebuilt copter. Notice the tail servo has been rotated 180`, allowing the large horn to be used. Despite still being slow, it's tail effectiveness heaven now. -
Views: 351
Meet sword copter. Sword copter works. There's no glitching with the 72Mhz antenna on the sword. -
Views: 373
The initial placement of the 72Mhz and 2.4Ghz antennas. The idea was to have the 2.4Ghz as visible as possible and far away from the 72Mhz. Future arrangements will get more compact. -
Views: 333
FPV camera platform #1. This is definitely temporary. -
Views: 293
The FPV camera platform. -
Views: 301
The voltage converter for the low definition camera. Most of it is capacitors to try to reduce ripple. The MAX632 doubles voltage using a very fast oscillator. The LM317 reduces it to exactly 8V. -
Views: 380
Full resolution capture of the 2.4Ghz transmission of prerecorded material. Definitely Hi-8 quality.
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Views: 418
The transmitter is liberated from its connectors to prepare for connection to composite video and 5V battery. The Astak warranty is definitely void. -
Views: 366
And a new 4 pin Molex connector is soldered in. Also built a much lighter transmitter antenna and changed the receiver antenna to the single segment. The transmitter antenna definitely needs reinforcement. -
Views: 366
Transmitter harness used composite output of prerecorded, high quality footage for the first time. Also had it on 4.4V from an ancient, virtually dead lantern battery. -
Views: 408
The receiving station directly under the transmitter showed stunning picture quality. -
Views: 380
Reception at 790 ft was much less directional with the single segment receiving antenna but no less noisy than the 6segment. Need to try the stock antennas again to make sure these collinears are really worth it. -
Views: 411
Crystal clear at 200 ft. Unfortunately the lantern battery seemed to be dead by this time so the last observations deteriorated even as distance closed.
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Views: 411
Finally probed the colored wires. Despite all the complaining on the internet about transmitters needing odd voltages, this cheap transmitter is not 9V. It's 5V. Only the camera part needs 9V. -
Views: 321
For the folks at home, decided to record more of the transmitter circuit. It seems to be hand soldered. Whether hand soldered in China or foot soldered on the Moon, anything's better than Americans. -
Views: 425
It was flimsy and heavy but it worked. -
Views: 413
Contrary to the depiction, the antenna was always vertical for testing. -
Views: 423
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Views: 378
Beyond 400ft the picture quality didn't change but antenna orientation got more polarized. -
Views: 356
At this distance, the slightest antenna deflection lost signal completely but when the picture came through it was equal to 400ft. -
Views: 314
The collinear transmitter after assembly. With 16 guage copper wire, the slightest flexing would crack the transmitter's PC board.
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Views: 419
In the last camera operation, removed the microphone and installed a 1/2 wavelength antenna. Can clearly see inside now. -
Views: 354
The collinear antenna is assembled. -
Views: 323
Got best results by making the transmitter antenna vertical. -
Views: 380
The wardriving kit with collinear antenna. -
Views: 315
Collinear results. At 600ft it only worked if the antenna was perfectly vertical and not a degree off. Everything beyond 200ft was noisy but hopefully good enough for orientation. -
Views: 338
For you EE's, the collinear measurements