"The MPU-6000 is the world’s first integrated 6-axis motion processor that eliminates gyro/accel cross-axis misalignment and offers dramatic package size reduction compared with multi-chip solutions. The MPU-6000 has an embedded 3-axis gyroscope, 3-axis accelerometer, and Digital Motion Processor™ (DMP™) hardware accelerator engine with a secondary I2C port that interfaces to third party accelerometer, compass, or other sensors to deliver a complete 9-axis sensor fusion output to its primary I2C port as a single data stream for the application.
The InvenSense Motion Processing Library abstracts motion-based complexities, offloads sensor management from the operating system and provides a structured set of APIs for application development.
For precision tracking of both fast and slow motions, the part features a user-programmable gyro full-scale range of ±250, ±500, ±1000, and ±2000°/sec (dps) and a user-programmable accelerometer full-scale range of ±2g, ±4g, ±8g, and ±16g. Communication of the device is performed using either I2C at up to 400kHz or SPI at up to 20MHz."
I'm not sure about the pricing, but given that it's targeted at game controllers and tablets, it should be pretty cheap.
Comments
For anyone who wants to use an MPU-60X0 chip with a Propeller processor, see my post here for code:
http://forums.parallax.com/showthread.php?131022-Propeller-DCM-Now-...
The code does not use the DMP feature of the MPU-60X0 chips - it just reads the gyro and accel data. It is compatible with the DCM code that Jason Dorie presents earlier in that same thread.
Chris
In the quest for the ultimate stabilization aerial platform. the gyro plays an important part. Our multi-rotor craft are used for high aerobatic performance that need 300 deg sec. gyros but then we also need the ultimate in slow moving highly stabilized camera platforms. Horses for courses. Invensense make gyros for many applications and in particular a 20 deg/sec gyros that outputs 50 mv/deg./sec as opposed to a 300 deg/sec gyro that outputs only 2 mv./deg/sec. So how about considering the production of an alternative board for just that purpose. Anyone who has tried to stabilize a camera with a 300 deg/sec gyro such as the AD 610 will know that noise oscillation sets-in long before you get anywhere near proper performance. Lets tighten up the copter stabilization as a first priority!!!
The chip presently retails around 15$ and should be available end of February 2011.
Evaluation board from Invensense retails around 70$.