3D Robotics

More News About the Solo Gimbal!

Reposting from the 3DR blog -

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Hello from China! Well, I’m writing this from an office in Palo Alto, but the news comes from the team in the factory in Guangzhou.

The gimbal is making good progress, with our production crew delivering some great footage recently. Check it out below.

The team is currently in China working on DVT2 of the gimbal, a pre-production build. If it goes well we move directly into making sellable units. The DVT2 units are essentially identical to PVT units (the ones we sell and deliver), so right now we’re just verifying the entire assembly and test procedure is in place before we say GO.

WHEN WILL THE GIMBAL BE OUT, BY THE WAY?

Right, a most important question! We’re targeting the end of July, about a month from now, and it’s looking good so far. Like we said, we want to get it right, so we always prioritize quality over schedule. Plus, the schedule has extra buffer time built in for any unknowns that may arise, so we’re feeling really good about making that delivery date. Until then, here’s a look at some footage from the gimbal as it is today—not even a touch of stabilization in post.

MORE ON THE STATUS OF THE GIMBAL

We’re happy to report that the HDMI flexes for production are meeting spec based on the latest testing, and we’ll be putting them into the DVT2 units by the end of this week. We’re still root-causing the 2% failures due the to over-currenting mentioned in the last post, and, long story short, we’re working on fixing this with more advanced filtering techniques on our power management. This means we’ve been able to turn this into a software issue, which means it won’t affect our manufacturing schedule—and for you, the delivery date!

The plan right now is to run the units through the actual assembly line with all the fixtures and test procedures in place. These procedures have been iterated on since the last build.

Right now we are finishing SMT—this acronym basically means the printed circuit boards are being cranked out and tested. The next step is assembly, in which all the pieces of the gimbal are put together and tested—this will be done this week, which means we will be test-flying the latest and greatest on copters over the weekend.

Meanwhile, in software land, a lot of supporting pieces are falling into place. These are mostly key pieces that include behavior not directly related to stabilization. These include making sure that the gimbal updates seamlessly when installed on the copter—this means that the user will be able to update the whole system at once via the Solo app, without any wires or uninstalling/reinstalling/screwdrivering of anything.

There is also internal “devops” infrastructure, such as updating our entire software build process to ensure new gimbal firmwares are always in sync with the rest of the code. The Pixhawk firmware, the Linux firmware on both the vehicle and controller, the STM32 on the controller, the app, the ESCs—whew—it’s a lot of stuff to coordinate. When you are early in the test process, the number of people fiddling with the system is small, so you can have a pretty manual build process. But as we test with more and more people, it’s crucial that we ensure all the systems remain in sync.

Finally, we’re adding much more robust datalogging from the gimbal, so we can better track and understand the behavior of the system over time. This will be one smart gimbal!

Stay tuned to this blog as we continue to roll out updates—we’re hoping to be able to add one every week, but honestly, this stuff might get way too technical and dull, so we might package weeks together. At any rate, we’ll maintain transparency every step of the way until the gimbals are on Solos and blowing minds!

Check out a video of recent footage. No post-stabilization.

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Comments

  • http://vk.com/video19006708_164433850

    price 400? it is very expensive.
    that was to shoot in 2013. gimbal is made very simple.

  • Hi Anekcahap,

    Video is blocked in US on Copyright grounds.

    I am sure the Solo gimbal will work very well.

    And probably have a lot of very useful camera integration because of 3DRs deal with GoPro.

    Will it be as cheap as a Gimbal from GoodLuckBuy - of course not.

    And they don't give away those Zenmuse gimbals either.

    3DR bashing is easy - but largely pointless, they do a remarkably good job up against the clone and copy sellers from China.

    The mega factories of Shenzhen and Guangzou are still making them, but at least they are making them to a known design with solid quality control.

    The Solo (and it's gimbal) look like a very innovative, solid and useful product that is affordable and well made.

    Best Regards,

    Gary

  • alexmos 2013)))) https://youtu.be/-Dykcg3hJfY

  • Somewhere along the way, I learned to stop watching the image, and start watching the content.  While Robert is technically correct, it's not perfect, it's pretty darn good and most of the target market will be quite happy with that.

    Robert is obviously not the target market, and never was going to be.

  • You guys are picky! I think the footage looks great, but I see Robert's point in some very minor shake in the edges. For a GoPro, I would never worry about getting better performance. Puts my old 2 axis gimbal to shame...

  • I love 3DR, I way prefer them to DJI! But I also have to be honest. The first time I watched the footage, I thought Robert was definitely smoking something. but then i watched the footage again and again more closely taking note of each aspect and in truth, when you watch the tree in the top left corner (2s - 7s) you can see there is quite a lot of shaking. Keep watching that corner and you can easily identify that it shakes throughout. Obviously 3DR will work to improve this though and I'd love to see the gimbal eventually surpass the Zenmuse.

  • I'm sure they planned on making the greatest gimbal ever.  Things don't always work out as planned.  I take it you're a big fan of 3dr?

  • Yes, I'm sure it's all part of some evil plan to make millions deceiving their customers. Thanks for the heads up.

  • It makes it alot easier to pass judgement when they are hiding how their gimbal performs by only releasing 2 extremely short clips in no wind.  Meanwhile, they have no problem taking preorders.

  • I'd prefer to see some more footage before making a statement like yours. But if you have a solution you like better and costs less then that's great. I'm sure the Solo could be fitted with any gimbal you like. Personally, I'd never shoot anything serious with a GoPro anyway without at least putting a decent lens on it. 3DR could have captured the entire aerial GoPro market if they had made a deal with them to use another lens. That lens simply isn't suited for this purpose. I wonder if GoPro will do something different when they produce their own copter?

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