Hi all. My girlfriend bought me a Mavic mini for my birthday. It's my first drone and I'm loving it.
I was wondering about the joystick configurations that were available in the inflight app. All the default configs I see have vertical translation and yaw on one joystick, horizontal translation on the other.
I guess this is like combining a helicopter's tail rotor and collective pitch on one joystick, and the other joystick acting like the cyclic control. But a helicopter's controls are inherited from the original mechanical realities of controlling a swash plate and a tail rotor. I have no idea what helicopter controls would be like if we had a fresh start and we were designing with fly-by-wire and thought about what people find intuitive.
I know that the controls can be customized, and I changed them to forward-back, yaw on the right, vertical translation and left-right on the other. I am interested in performance flying (speed and agility - photography/filming is secondary) so I guess in my mind I am thinking more VSTOL aircraft forward-oriented and turning by banking (but I LOVE helicopters). But I don't want to develop bad habits and find out I am going to regret programming my brain with the wrong ergonomics and finding out that as I upgrade to other drones that all assumptions for use were based on drone joystick standards.
My second question has to do with the inflight display. I am flying the drone by looking at it - the way I see people do with RC planes. I don't know what the norm is. I live on a very heavily wooded property and would like to try navigating entirely with the display, not looking at the drone. But the display has very little info on direction, elevation - no graduated ticks or the like to give you an idea of what the centerline of the drone is. I realize that wind can make all this moot, so I am wondering if such a display is possible but not used because it's just another bad habit to develop.
I appreciate any advice you may have.
I was wondering about the joystick configurations that were available in the inflight app. All the default configs I see have vertical translation and yaw on one joystick, horizontal translation on the other.
I guess this is like combining a helicopter's tail rotor and collective pitch on one joystick, and the other joystick acting like the cyclic control. But a helicopter's controls are inherited from the original mechanical realities of controlling a swash plate and a tail rotor. I have no idea what helicopter controls would be like if we had a fresh start and we were designing with fly-by-wire and thought about what people find intuitive.
I know that the controls can be customized, and I changed them to forward-back, yaw on the right, vertical translation and left-right on the other. I am interested in performance flying (speed and agility - photography/filming is secondary) so I guess in my mind I am thinking more VSTOL aircraft forward-oriented and turning by banking (but I LOVE helicopters). But I don't want to develop bad habits and find out I am going to regret programming my brain with the wrong ergonomics and finding out that as I upgrade to other drones that all assumptions for use were based on drone joystick standards.
My second question has to do with the inflight display. I am flying the drone by looking at it - the way I see people do with RC planes. I don't know what the norm is. I live on a very heavily wooded property and would like to try navigating entirely with the display, not looking at the drone. But the display has very little info on direction, elevation - no graduated ticks or the like to give you an idea of what the centerline of the drone is. I realize that wind can make all this moot, so I am wondering if such a display is possible but not used because it's just another bad habit to develop.
I appreciate any advice you may have.