Sensor Calibration
Sensor Calibration
Hello Everyone,
Starting the crazyflie on a flat surface gives wrong reading for the actual values of Roll/Pitch/yaw values.
Roll: ranging from -0.2 to -0.7
Pitch: ranging from 0.5 to -0.5
Yaw: ranging from 0 to -0.02
Those are the actual readings without the crazyflie even leaves the ground yet, these of course leads to heavy drifting while only using thrust.
any suggestions?
Update:
I added graphs for the pitch/roll/yaw in 3 minutes of time while the drone is in complete stationary. As you guys can see there is an increase in angles with no clear reason especially in "roll" angles. For the position using LPS with 8 anchors, it looks fine. I have a standard deviation of 0.0079, 0.0067,0.0099 for X,Y,Z respectively What do you guys think?
Thank you!
Starting the crazyflie on a flat surface gives wrong reading for the actual values of Roll/Pitch/yaw values.
Roll: ranging from -0.2 to -0.7
Pitch: ranging from 0.5 to -0.5
Yaw: ranging from 0 to -0.02
Those are the actual readings without the crazyflie even leaves the ground yet, these of course leads to heavy drifting while only using thrust.
any suggestions?
Update:
I added graphs for the pitch/roll/yaw in 3 minutes of time while the drone is in complete stationary. As you guys can see there is an increase in angles with no clear reason especially in "roll" angles. For the position using LPS with 8 anchors, it looks fine. I have a standard deviation of 0.0079, 0.0067,0.0099 for X,Y,Z respectively What do you guys think?
Thank you!
Last edited by AAtef92 on Thu Jan 24, 2019 9:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Sensor Calibration
It is hard to make it drift little without using some external stabilizer such as the flow deck. How stable to you hope to get it? Minimizing vibrations is something that helps.
Re: Sensor Calibration
Thanks for your reply, i am using loco positioning system with 8 anchors, TDoA 2 mode.
issuing it python commands to hover or go up a certain height is not working as intended if at all. The drone goes up and drift badly in a random direction.
It bashed the wall a lot, but nothing broken, could that affect the crazy readings i am getting for the sensors?
I also checked the propellers or balance and starting the drone facing x-axis.
issuing it python commands to hover or go up a certain height is not working as intended if at all. The drone goes up and drift badly in a random direction.
It bashed the wall a lot, but nothing broken, could that affect the crazy readings i am getting for the sensors?
I also checked the propellers or balance and starting the drone facing x-axis.
Re: Sensor Calibration
If you are using the LPS it should not drift away. To me it sounds like it does not get any position lock. How does the position look like in the Loco tab in the cflient? This behavior could also happen if a joystick is used which doesn't output 0 since velocity mode is used to control with a joystick.
Re: Sensor Calibration
1- the position is correct in the loco tab when it is stationary and even when i move the drone by hand to verify the tracking.
2- drifting occurs when I use the xbox controller or when i use the python script, but it worth noting that it often get stuck at "wait_for_position_estimator" function from the "autonomousSequence.py".
so my question is, is it the reason of the fluctuating readings from the gyro? or it can be noise in the room, that the drone cant calculate a precise location? what do you suggest?
Thanks!
2- drifting occurs when I use the xbox controller or when i use the python script, but it worth noting that it often get stuck at "wait_for_position_estimator" function from the "autonomousSequence.py".
so my question is, is it the reason of the fluctuating readings from the gyro? or it can be noise in the room, that the drone cant calculate a precise location? what do you suggest?
Thanks!
Re: Sensor Calibration
The fluctuating values can be expected because of the noise from the positioning, the question is how much. Have you tried flying manually without the LPS, just to check that there is no problem with the CF2. It could also be some miss-configuration of the LPS, the wait_for_position_estimator hints that.
Re: Sensor Calibration
yes I tried, and without LPS it is even more bad.
I made sure that propellers are balanced and battery is tucked tight.
1- Can it be unbalanced motors?
2- how LPS can be miss-configured if I get approximate correct location on cf-client?
3- you mentioned controlling it with joystick may cause errors with velocity mode, can I change the mode from cf-client?
Thanks
I made sure that propellers are balanced and battery is tucked tight.
1- Can it be unbalanced motors?
2- how LPS can be miss-configured if I get approximate correct location on cf-client?
3- you mentioned controlling it with joystick may cause errors with velocity mode, can I change the mode from cf-client?
Thanks
Re: Sensor Calibration
The drift you see is small and comparing it to a CF2 I have here it looks normal. I'm leaning towards that it is something with the scripts or that the joystick is none zero. What script have you tried?
1. Unbalanced motors will make it a bit more "nervous" when flying with the LPS but it should not make it drift away. In the cflient console tab there is a "propeller test" button. Try this to check the state of propellers/motors.
2. If the e.g. the anchor positions are set wrong the position can behave strange.
3. The joystick can currently only control the CF2 with velocity mode. With scripts it is a different thing though, Have you tried this script?
1. Unbalanced motors will make it a bit more "nervous" when flying with the LPS but it should not make it drift away. In the cflient console tab there is a "propeller test" button. Try this to check the state of propellers/motors.
2. If the e.g. the anchor positions are set wrong the position can behave strange.
3. The joystick can currently only control the CF2 with velocity mode. With scripts it is a different thing though, Have you tried this script?
Re: Sensor Calibration
1- I tried "autonomousSequence.py" and "motion_commander_demo.py" and both lead to painful wall crashing :/
2- I reflashed the anchors and verified their locations, everything is fine except "z" reading is kinda off, as the position is esimated "0.3" above ground while it is stationary on the ground, so I am working on further calibrating it.
3- yeah i tried it and the copter drifted and hit the wall.
2- I reflashed the anchors and verified their locations, everything is fine except "z" reading is kinda off, as the position is esimated "0.3" above ground while it is stationary on the ground, so I am working on further calibrating it.
3- yeah i tried it and the copter drifted and hit the wall.
Re: Sensor Calibration
hmmm, tough one...and you are sure you have the CF2 pointing in the LPS positive X direction when you power it on?
You said it is drifting when you fly the CF2 manually (without loco deck), are you able to control it at all? Could you post the cfclient console output after connecting to the CF2 with the loco deck. Maybe that can tell us something.
You said it is drifting when you fly the CF2 manually (without loco deck), are you able to control it at all? Could you post the cfclient console output after connecting to the CF2 with the loco deck. Maybe that can tell us something.