Commercial use of drones in farms and other agriculture
Hexa with Hobbywing X8 motors
Hii am building a hexacopter with1.) hobbywing x8 motors2.) flight controller pixhawk PX53.) battery 12s 22Ah4.) wheel base of around 1800mm5.) estimated weight around 17kg without payloadi am looking if anyone has already tuned this type so i can get a head start. looking forwardthank youMike
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MAPIR cameras seem to be rather expensive for a cheap point & shoot camera with a $10 filter?
Buy a P&S at Best Buy, visit Edmund Optics online. The post processing software is available free from a number of resources, you could get Pix4D's if you want something slightly better than open source stuff off the internet.
MAPIR shows graphics of their filters spectral response, is this with a lens or without the lens, or are they just taking the word of the manufacturer that made the filter?
Another issue here is that the imaging sensors are color. The sensors should be monochrome, that way you can use all available pixels on the sensor. All of these color sensors come in a Bayer Pattern. There are two green, one red, and one blue pixel grouped together. Therefore a 12mp Bayer color sensor with a red or NIR filter is using only 3MP out of the entire sensor.
With a monochrome sensor, you would use all 12mp. This does not work if you mix all of the color pixels on a Bayer sensor to get a monochrome image, it has to be a sensor with no Bayer pattern.
Your best bet for the cash strapped is to buy a consumer grade off the shelf Foveon(www.foveon.com) based Point & Shoot camera. The Foveon sensor has stacked photodiodes, not a Bayer pattern. You can pull data from each color layer individually, no need for filters, unless you want specific wavelengths? No need to worry about image stitching, the camera does it for you!
Only 12MP and 3 sec per picture. Not really great specs for a dedicated mapping camera.
Has anyone used these MAPIR cameras for NDIV mapping? Any possible issues ? I noticed they are just hard mounted, does anyone find a gimbal produces better results, or just allow enough overlap to alleviate any distortion?
http://www.mapir.camera/collections/cameras
What would be a good equipment for NDVI + IR + Regular photo all in one so that i do not have to fly again and again for same area
What camera would that be?
GoPro's, again consumer grade cameras, not real good quality stuff, a bit over priced if you ask me for what you get. But hey, they have a marketing machine!!
The Long Wave Infrared cameras would be excellent for firefighters, especially locating hot spots, people, wire inspection, in the field looking for animals that could be in danger, people in danger in areas that may be in a fire wake.
There are uses in Ag for the LWIR cameras, but most is in the Visible and Short Wave Infrared(400-1700nm).
Sure lets talk, send me a direct email: kdbusto@vegatecgroup.com
I will reply to set up a time and date.
Ok, now the problem is allmost the standard. I would say Vega is right, maybe you are reachiching the lifetime of your sensor.