Well we are part way through out project on an autonomous quadrotor platform.
The first two videos are of the first flights. The third is the first crash (*sigh*).
Flight 1:
I am piloting this one and making sure it works before trying anything too extreme.
Flight 2:
Bryan is flying this one and he is testing out the performance of the ArduCopter
Crash 1:
I was piloting this one, and something just failed, cause is still unknown.
We managed to have a nice sunny day to fly the quads in the Brisbane Botanical Gardens.
The next step is to have it taking off and landing autonomously using the gps and pressure sensors. After that, get wifi-data.
We shall keep you posted!!
Comments
Hi guys, thanks for the feedback.
I did suspect the ESC's were the culprit. I will look at a better connection system.
At this stage we were just using NG and we'll be changing that soon to the ArduPirates further down the track. This was simply a demonstration as to us getting it flying and making sure it works.
The first video was me establishing which direction was the front/back/left/right as we had not yet marked up which is which...
Yesterday we managed to get a separate arduino board communicating with a wifi network. Next step is getting the ArduCopter to use that information effectively.
Thanks again guys and we will keep you posted as to our progress.
If you plan to rebuild your ArduCopter, on same time you can remove those bullets. As said kits still have them but not as presoldered so its up to the user to use them or not.
Changing is naturally a bit more harder with soldered wires
ESC directly to the motors.
I haven't had any problems with the deans connectors.
I have the old kit, and I had the bullet connector. Since I have not soldered it yet, you suggests it's better to solder the ESC directly to the distribution board?