I live on the side of a mountain range and like to cruise my MA2 up the hillside. I recently did a roughly six minute run up a canyon in Pilot mode on a clear day with minimal wind. The total distance traveled up was about two thirds of a mile. I visually estimate from the video that I never got higher than 150 feet AGL and most of the time was probably half that, yet when I use DroneViewer to export the .srt path to .KML for Google Earth I get a completely different story.
Google Earth will display the path as a red line, and by right clicking on the line I can easily display the elevation profile of the path. When I compare the elevation of the path profile to the elevation of the ground (a simple mouse over in Google Earth), the difference (supposedly the height above ground) steadily increases to the point that about 1,000 feet above my takeoff point that difference is almost 800 feet. No way I was 800 feet above real ground, so I'm wondering where the error comes from. The hillside slope is not steep enough to explain the difference, such as my actual position being significantly different from my visually perceived position. Google Earth isn't perfect in its elevation accuracy, but no way is it off by 800 feet.
I also find it curious that the "error" increases steadily from my takeoff point. I can view the Google Earth path (the red line) from the side to compare against the land profile, and the red line simply has a steeper slope than the land for the entire path.
Does the MA2 barometer possibly have some sort of linear error (non-constant offset) for significant changes in altitude? I don't think that the error lies with Drone Viewer since it simply uses a Google Earth overlay based upon the lat/long coordinates from the drone's .srt file ... which seem to be accurate. Any thoughts?
One possibility might be that the barometer simply isn't that accurate for low pressures, since my starting point was at 5,150 feet ASL. That would be a bit disappointing since I had hoped to use an app like Litchi, DroneLink, or Maven to do some ridge running with appropriately programmed elevations for the various waypoints.
Google Earth will display the path as a red line, and by right clicking on the line I can easily display the elevation profile of the path. When I compare the elevation of the path profile to the elevation of the ground (a simple mouse over in Google Earth), the difference (supposedly the height above ground) steadily increases to the point that about 1,000 feet above my takeoff point that difference is almost 800 feet. No way I was 800 feet above real ground, so I'm wondering where the error comes from. The hillside slope is not steep enough to explain the difference, such as my actual position being significantly different from my visually perceived position. Google Earth isn't perfect in its elevation accuracy, but no way is it off by 800 feet.
I also find it curious that the "error" increases steadily from my takeoff point. I can view the Google Earth path (the red line) from the side to compare against the land profile, and the red line simply has a steeper slope than the land for the entire path.
Does the MA2 barometer possibly have some sort of linear error (non-constant offset) for significant changes in altitude? I don't think that the error lies with Drone Viewer since it simply uses a Google Earth overlay based upon the lat/long coordinates from the drone's .srt file ... which seem to be accurate. Any thoughts?
One possibility might be that the barometer simply isn't that accurate for low pressures, since my starting point was at 5,150 feet ASL. That would be a bit disappointing since I had hoped to use an app like Litchi, DroneLink, or Maven to do some ridge running with appropriately programmed elevations for the various waypoints.