What happens if I climbed a mountain and flew out an down? I can only go up 500M from where I started but would I be able to go down as far as I want? How does that work? Has anyone done this before?
I haven't actually had the opportunity to try that yet however I would expect you could go down as low as you wanted within the range of the phantom. That would be very cool to try and I bet the footage would be amazing.
Yes, film the trial flight and post it for us other mountaineers.
I will try this myself, the next trip I make to visit family in Canmore Alberta, in the Rockies...
What a beautiful country, Canada... I love you home and land of the free.
So, theoretically the Phantom is limited to 500m above ground. So let's say the guy takes off way up in the mountains and flies over a cliff that has a vertical drop of 600M. What happens when the Phantom sees the number in excess of 500M?
LOL - as long as he flies *down* the mountain, the numbers will be negative.
Now, the thought comes up that he'd better not land somewhere down there and start over!
This shouldn't be funny, but, somehow, it is!
I am curious about negative altitude though. Can anyone confirm that nothing funny happens at that point? I fly from a cliff sometimes but have been hesitant to go below my start point out of fear the craft will freak out with negative altitude.
After my neighbor swatted my P3P out of the air my home point always starts at negative 9.8ft +/- (calibrating doesn't help)…….still flew perfectly and hope that is fixed as well when it comes back from the shop.
greenbean Posted at 2015-7-3 05:47
After my neighbor swatted my P3P out of the air my home point always starts at negative 9.8ft +/- ...
I have flown lower than the start point without any issues. As others have pointed out it will just show negative numbers. I posted a question a few days ago trying to see if there is a way to have the height shown be the actual above ground height, i.e. not referenced to the take off point but I have not received any replies. I would prefer to see the actual above ground height so I know how high off the ground the copter is when it is half a mile away down in a valley.
pbrown73 Posted at 2015-7-3 05:29
I am curious about negative altitude though. Can anyone confirm that nothing funny happens at that p ...
I have flown lower than the start point without any issues. As others have pointed out it will just show negative numbers. I posted a question a few days ago trying to see if there is a way to have the height shown be the actual above ground height, i.e. not referenced to the take off point but I have not received any replies. I would prefer to see the actual above ground height so I know how high off the ground the copter is when it is half a mile away down in a valley.
Instead of just starting a thread why not look at all the past threads? This same thing has been discussed 3+ other times in 3+ threads since May.. Read a little people, come on
minuzzo Posted at 2015-7-3 08:33
I have flown lower than the start point without any issues. As others have pointed out it will ju ...
There is no way to do "actual above ground height" because the P3 has no way to detect where the ground is other than the VPS which only works up to 10 feet.
It is going by the barometric sensor which is just detecting change in altitude. The height it is showing is the change from where it started to where it is currently.
Yes you can go down below where you started with no problem. It just shows a negative change. The 500m altitude limit is really just a maximum positive change. There is no negative limit.
My house sits on a hill about 80 feet high and I flew down into the holler while I was filming some deer grazing below. While I noticed the negative altitude on my display with some mild amusement nothing unusual or unpredictable happened.
Hey, maybe somebody from out West can fly downinto one of those "Cosmic vortexes" like around Sedona Arizona and see if maybe they can get some footage of an alternative dimension or something equally weird!