gary.ok
lvl.4
United States
Offline
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Yeah that doesn't really tell me a whole bunch. If one IMU says "X" and one says "Y" how does the Phantom know that "X" is wrong and "Y" is the one to use to navigate itself by? Which one is right, and which one is wrong? If you have three sensors, now you have true a redundant system in that if you have a failure, two of them will say "X" and one will say "Y". So the system will know that "X" is right and "Y" is wrong. What you have provides zero increase in reliability statistically, and is not redundant. I see the concept from your marketing side that if one is good, two is better, but as far logic goes in a control system they are exactly the same. A failure of either one of them, is a failure, and the control system cannot ascertain what to do.
They really should arm you guys with more than just the published literature and talking points. I mean that stuff we can read for ourselves. |
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