Maybe someone has encountered a small scale parachute ?
I'd like to add a safety parachute to the Arducopter !! help me decide....
As part of the project is to use an expensive DSLR on the copter,
My GF said i must have some kind of emergency parachute... after joking at it, i thought deeper -
I'd rather feel much safer having a parachute as backup to all electronics (even though i plan on 6 or 8 motors)
Just imagine an emergency button that will immediately turn off all motors and shoot a parachute.
questions:
as parachute takes some time to open (=some free fall height), the benefits are sure and obvious for a 100m fall.
but if i'm around 5m above ground, (which can still be nasty to the DSLR) - would i have enough "falling time" to open the parachute and having enough braking force ?
think i better make one by myself ? is it rather simple as cutting and connecting wires to a cloth,
or it is more complex design that i could hardly achieve and i better get a ready one ?
i came across this as the only parachute i could find:
http://cgi.ebay.com/NEW-40-SPEED-RUNNING-POWER-CHUTE-training-parac...
It looks sturdy and well balanced & stuff... it's totally affordable !
they say the 40" version has 7KG resistance. i'm safe on this side, i dont want a much bigger one.
how about the opening technique ?
i could stuff it in a small plastic tube attached to the top of the dome, using a small solenoid or servo to kick it out...
how do i ensure it opens reliably ? i guess it depends on the folding inside the storage tube...
Comment by Martin Seven on March 27, 2011 at 10:32pm There are a number of ways. Mechanical (springs, pistons, levers... actuated by servos) that are heavy and slow, natural (drogue chute positioned to open on its own when the airspeed reaches a certain level) which is dangerous because you never know when it opens, and pyrotechnic (a very small BP charge together with a commercial fireworks electronic igniter) which is by far the lightest, most reliable and safest of them all.
There are even chute designs with forced inflation - a system of weights and strings designed so that when ejected out of the chute tube it forces the parachute open, making it effective within meters from the apex of the free fall.
Comment by ARHEXA on March 27, 2011 at 10:39pm oh no, taking explosives onboard is a step too far :D
i want to safely land my camera, not to blow it in the sky :P
the servo arm pushing it out is obvious, but i'm afraid this won't 'throw' it harsh enough (resulting in bad opening?)
Maybe a bot off topic, but still about parachutes: I used a 36" chute on my HAB capsule. I guess I had 15-20 Km/h at impact. The landing video i here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evNg1oWyfu4
But I had 21'000m to open the parachute ;-)
@Marco
How much does the set up weight?
Comment by Nicolas Brieger on March 28, 2011 at 3:37am
Comment by ARHEXA on March 28, 2011 at 3:46am pyro propulsion is probably not stupid to use.
i might go this way, it's not too complicated or expensive to make,
and it has the force like nothing else...
when you compare the german video device to a servo arm pushing a compressed parachute out of a tube, it's quite obvious....
Comment by Martin Seven on March 28, 2011 at 4:38am
Comment by ARHEXA on March 28, 2011 at 4:44am Martin,
expect the blog post in a month or so about propulsion system for the parachute....
the thing is i'm still hesitating on which parachute to go for...
i aim for 40" (1 meter) or a bit less.
on all the rockets sites ive seen, they use 20" parachutes for max 1KG loads...
thats far of being my needs...
ill go though on one from a rocket store rather than a sports one, because they are made lightweight and efficient i believe
Comment by ARHEXA on March 28, 2011 at 4:51am i'll just try to avoid this happening
Cool??!! No it wasn't.
On the other hand I like this vdo because it shows what should be done:
1st stop the motors
2nd Let the drone free fall "some time" to catch some vertical speed
3rd trigger the chute
4rd cross your fingers
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