Almost exactly one year after the first PX4 announcement, we would like to introduce our newest member of the family, Pixhawk! For those familiar with the existing PX4 electronics, it is the all-in-one board combining PX4FMU + PX4IO, combined with a processor and sensor update and a number of new features. The current board revisions will however remain in full service and active development and are fully compatible. Pixhawk is designed for improved ease of use and reliability while offering unprecedented safety features compared to existing solutions.
Pixhawk is designed by the PX4 open hardware project and manufactured by 3D Robotics. It features the latest processor and sensor technology from ST Microelectronics which delivers incredible performance and reliability at low price points.
The flexible PX4 middleware running on the NuttX Real-Time Operating System brings multithreading and the convenience of a Unix / Linux like programming environment to the open source autopilot domain, while the custom PX4 driver layer ensures tight timing. These facilities and additional headroom on RAM and flash will allow Pixhawk the addition of completely new functionalities like programmatic scripting of autopilot operations.
The PX4 project offers its own complete flight control stack, and projects such as APM:Copter and APM:Plane have ported their software to run as flight control applications. This allows existing APM users to seamlessly transition to the new Pixhawk hardware and lowers the barriers to entry for new users to participate in the exciting world of autonomous vehicles.
The flagship Pixhawk module will be accompanied by new peripheral options, including a digital airspeed sensor, support for an external multi-color LED indicator and an external magnetometer. All peripherals are automatically detected and configured.
Features
32 bit ARM Cortex M4 Processor running NuttX RTOS
14 PWM / Servo outputs (8 with failsafe and manual override, 6 auxiliary,
high-power compatible)
Abundant connectivity options for additional peripherals (UART, I2C, CAN)
Integrated backup system for in-flight recovery and manual override with
dedicated processor and stand-alone power supply
Backup system integrates mixing, providing consistent autopilot and manual
override mixing modes
Redundant power supply inputs and automatic failover
External safety switch
Multicolor LED main visual indicator
High-power, multi-tone piezo audio indicator
microSD card for long-time high-rate logging
32bit STM32F427 Cortex M4 core with FPU
168 MHz
256 KB RAM
2 MB Flash
32 bit STM32F103 failsafe co-processor
ST Micro L3GD20H 16 bit gyroscope
ST Micro LSM303D 14 bit accelerometer / magnetometer
MEAS MS5611 barometer
5x UART (serial ports), one high-power capable, 2x with HW flow control
2xCAN
Spektrum DSM / DSM2 / DSM-X® Satellite compatible input
Futaba S.BUS® compatible input and output
PPM sum signal
RSSI (PWM or voltage) input
I2C®
SPI
3.3 and 6.6V ADC inputs
External microUSB port
Power System and Protection
Ideal diode controller with automatic failover
Servo rail high-power (up to 10V) and high-current ready (10A +)
All peripheral outputs over-current protected, all inputs ESD protected
- Monitoring of system and servo rails, over current status monitoring of peripherals
Dimensions
Weight: 38g (1.31oz)
Width: 50mm (1.96")
Thickness: 15.5mm (.613")
Length: 81.5mm (3.21")
Availability
This announcement is a service to our users and developers to allow them to plan their hardware roadmaps in time, and to show what we're currently working on. The board will not be immediately available, but 3D Robotics is taking pre-orders for Pixhawk now, and will begin shipping in late October [Update 11/11: the current expected ship date is late Nov]. The price is $199.99.
Comments
I do understand, I also know USA shipping rates rose recently, it makes this whole thing rather difficult for those outside USA, imagine you need to order one extra cable which often happens, maybe 3DR needs to look at a Chinese distributor.
you have to also consider this is a product line or area where many people buy before research and get in over their heads quickly and fail to understand that nothing is plug and play and will fully work or fly out of the box ,and usually assume something is wrong with the hardware and complain quick, having the shipping practices in place can aid in disputes and provide one more level of protection for both parties, I have ordered many parts from 3dr and as far as shipping to Canada goes it's spot on for shipping prices to me, sure their are times I too wish it was cheaper when I see one cable I'd like to buy now ,and because of it I wait until I have a larger order to do so
It probably.. well more than often makes me search for other sellers who also deal in a similar product that can offer it with cheaper shipping if any, that's just how it goes
Also on the iPhone/iPad front, Bill Bonney is developing a mission planner-style app called "Mav Pilot" that will use either a WiFi or BlueToothLE bridge to connect to a 915Mhz telemetry radio. Nothing will have to be connected to your tablet/phone. The beta version looked very promising. I'm not involved with this project, just been following it, so my info may be off/old.
no I take your word joe ,I'm just saying some companies have strict guideline's on shipping practices and don't place themselves in a position to loose money from unnecessary reasons that can happen
Yes, I do it every day. Want proof ?
I would imagine all rates for shipping are to reinforce seller/buyer protection guidelines (signature/tracking/insurance) as to the reason why cheaper methods are not provided
if you were the seller would you chance shipping items without taking the same precautions?
Why would any sane person pay $40.20 now for PRIORITY which will not be shipped before late October, or $40.20 for Economy, I guess that makes perfect sense to someone.
3DR Store has such awful shipping rates outside of USA, I suspect this needs to addressed, soon I hope..
FedEx International Economy $40.20
FedEx International Priority $43.24
I use a spektrum sat only on my kk2 now, so that's great
the openpilot also uses the opcable for sat direct connection its nice to see this implementation
having an adapter seems a better solution to go backwards anyway