Take a look at section 3.2 in the user manualIt seems to me that the zero of time on the DAT charts corresponds to the start of the motors, and that that corresponds to the zero of time on the txt charts. ...
https://datfile.net/Doc/DatCon4.pdf
Take a look at section 3.2 in the user manualIt seems to me that the zero of time on the DAT charts corresponds to the start of the motors, and that that corresponds to the zero of time on the txt charts. ...
No ... motor related data are only found in the DAT logs.indeed i asked him, because i have tried to read it with csv view but i couldn't, i supposed that mini2 can't be read like mm but notso in txt files can i see the rotation of motors? Thanks
That's because CsvView does some additional processing on the .csv created by TXTlogToCSVtool. Specifically, the IMUCalcs stuff and the sigStrength data.You might like to have a look at Budwalker's post, #18 in Flight logs can someone check them
I have a number of csv's of .txt flightlogs which are the result of runnng TXTlogToCSVtoolMM en-masse via the command line and when looking at some of those csv's they seem to end at column JO (APP_MESS.message) whereas .txt csv's that result from running CsvView run to column KH (OSD.yawUnWrapped:C) with the titles of the additional columns all ending ":C".
Take a look at...... I wonder if there is a description of all the signals available in CsvView? Some of the names are obvious, but some are a bit cryptic. Some appear to be raw data, while others are calculated from the raw data streams. It seems a C suffix indicates a calculate value rather than a directly measured value.
....
Keep in mind that at a higher altitude wind gusts can be a lot stronger than at ground level and easily tilt a mini to 49 degA few weeks ago my MM got caught in a gust and it is the first time I have been in a position to see it 'being blown away' i.e. blown 'sideways' relative to the original line of sight. A thread in here prompted me to look at the flight's DAT.
I see a needle like spike in the tilt of slighlty over 49deg and am curious, could this be real?
It was quite windy, the stuff at the end is me carrying it.
Strong winds on their own don't normally cause a mini to tilt beyond the firmware programmed limit of 30deg. If the aircraft is tilting at 30deg and still cannot hold its location then a blow-away is what happens, rather than the tilt of the aircraft going beyond 30deg.Keep in mind that at a higher altitude wind gusts can be a lot stronger than at ground level and easily tilt a mini to 49 deg
funny, right?I was inspired by @WooZie to have another play about with the "pause" button (ie short press on the RTH button) and managed to get short spikes of high inclination. Seems the normal tilt limits are overridden to achieve a higher braking force. I managed to coax a peak of 54deg tilt by tapping the pause button while doing 13m/s. @PhiliusFoggg Just wondering if this is what you did unwittingly in post #1? Seems a bit unlikely but I've not found another way of getting this high a tilt in flight (other than crashing ?)
I guess if I hadn't played about with the tilt limit parameters already it would have been more spectacular.funny, right?![]()
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