- Joined
- Dec 6, 2016
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 1
- Age
- 56
received typhoon H, i'm literally 4.99m away from a chicago airport. Have now flown approx 200 or so times now. few incidents, but PLENTY of scares.
i quickly learned smart mode is more like "auto idiot" and after the first flight told myself, this is not the way to do this. i switched to angle mode,
i learned quickly and after 200 or so takeoffs, and with emails to Yuneec, the H has some failsafes that i think aided in 2 hard landings (hard landings being props contacting ground) near misses would be a much higher number.
the word is "toilet bowl" is what comes to mind. it mimics the movements the H will make, when it should otherwise be hovering. Long story short, giving the H is normally rock solid in the air when idle... I've learned when it decides the battery is low (with or with a warning) it will lower power to the motors CYCLICALLY in an attempt to lower the power usage which according to Yuneec has been what i've encountering.
i.e. toilet bowl.
i dont know about you, but trying to land a bird that's doing a 3-6 foot circle at 6" above the ground is next to impossible.
luckily the first time i was in a large (wet) field, i ended up with muddy props, the 2nd time i had to cut power and let it fall 3"
i've seen this while stationary 150' up in the air (and learned to land immediately) prior to any warnings. where it is just doing circles instead of otherwise being stationary.
my batteries never show less than 14.8v at the time, i'm in Chicago, and it is winter but 10 minutes into anything should not cause this.
yes, I've calibrated, multiple times. facing true north. i've calibrated the accelerometr as well, verifying no wind, flat, and level in all directions.
i've seen some crazy movement after updating & calibrating (with confirmation from h we're good) only to do the calibration 2, 3 times more.... while in the middle of a grassy area, away from electrical interference, w/my phone shut off in the car > 50 feet away) this is not that....
the toilet bowl effect only happens when voltage seem to go < 15v which in Chicago in winter is about 5 minutes of flight time before taking it home and crossing your fingers.
i quickly learned smart mode is more like "auto idiot" and after the first flight told myself, this is not the way to do this. i switched to angle mode,
i learned quickly and after 200 or so takeoffs, and with emails to Yuneec, the H has some failsafes that i think aided in 2 hard landings (hard landings being props contacting ground) near misses would be a much higher number.
the word is "toilet bowl" is what comes to mind. it mimics the movements the H will make, when it should otherwise be hovering. Long story short, giving the H is normally rock solid in the air when idle... I've learned when it decides the battery is low (with or with a warning) it will lower power to the motors CYCLICALLY in an attempt to lower the power usage which according to Yuneec has been what i've encountering.
i.e. toilet bowl.
i dont know about you, but trying to land a bird that's doing a 3-6 foot circle at 6" above the ground is next to impossible.
luckily the first time i was in a large (wet) field, i ended up with muddy props, the 2nd time i had to cut power and let it fall 3"
i've seen this while stationary 150' up in the air (and learned to land immediately) prior to any warnings. where it is just doing circles instead of otherwise being stationary.
my batteries never show less than 14.8v at the time, i'm in Chicago, and it is winter but 10 minutes into anything should not cause this.
yes, I've calibrated, multiple times. facing true north. i've calibrated the accelerometr as well, verifying no wind, flat, and level in all directions.
i've seen some crazy movement after updating & calibrating (with confirmation from h we're good) only to do the calibration 2, 3 times more.... while in the middle of a grassy area, away from electrical interference, w/my phone shut off in the car > 50 feet away) this is not that....
the toilet bowl effect only happens when voltage seem to go < 15v which in Chicago in winter is about 5 minutes of flight time before taking it home and crossing your fingers.
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