Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Original comment by analogue...@gmail.com
on 6 Dec 2010 at 4:17
Original comment by dewei...@gmail.com
on 10 Jan 2011 at 4:34
I am not sure this is worth the hassle.
Basing this on the what information I can find that on average the GPS fixes
arrive (on average) timestamped 0.25 seconds after a NTP type syncronized UTC
clock. This is a fairly constant, and smallest lag for the lat/long type GPS
replies. It would be easy to test this is true.
In 0.25 seconds, a plane especially one moving at high speed, is not going to
significantly change its direction: so dead reckoning based on IMU forces are
pretty useless (unless you want to dead reckon a crash!). As I understand that
code, it is adjusting GPS fixes from G-forces since the fix?
Secondly, in 0.25 seconds this hypothetical 200kmh autopilot RC jet has
travelled 55 meters, in a quarter of a second, it has travelled ~15 meters, in
almost exactly a straight line.
The GPS position is used for calculating of desired bearing and distance to
desired waypoint. Neither of these calculations could be much influenced by a
15 meter inaccuracy in position, especially not for a plane flying at 200kmh
that would neither be required or able to do pinpoint waypoint or track
following.
Perhaps I misunderstand something critical here, but I don't predict any
visible improvement in autopilot skills from adjusting GPS for lag.
Now if GPS is marginal, if fixes fade in and out for seconds at a time, or drop
significantly in quality based on the number of satellites metric, then dead
reckoning is useful. Typically though I think such a state of affairs is
unusual for a plane where the sky is entirely visible?
Original comment by justinbe...@gmail.com
on 6 Sep 2011 at 1:25
I think this will be a great addition. Especially because I don't trust GPS
data that much. Has anyone tried estimating the position with a Kalman filter?
www.hardiepienaar.co.za
Original comment by HARDIEPI...@gmail.com
on 26 Sep 2012 at 12:56
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
analogue...@gmail.com
on 6 Dec 2010 at 4:17