It's impressive.
It must be cool to see taking place in the flesh. It's also gotta be an exercise in boredom to be involved in the team that is making these things... (I wonder how many man hours went into just the config to play the tune, and setup of the Hexacopters MUCH LESS the software and implementation to co-ordinate all this.) Heh, take a look at who's supported these KMEL guys. |
I must be getting old. Give me an RC plane over this any
day. |
i would be more impressed if this was outside
you know where the wind blows, and makes it harder by 50 |
I'd be more impressed if the drones did it blindfolded.
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i would be more impressed if this was outside I don't think it would make it that much harder... these things can already easily overcome the effects of some pretty insane weather (being that they're so light and have respectively very powerful motors). I say this having seen a mates' 'off the shelf' quad copter respond to a 'come home' command where he flipped a switch on his controller and it casually returned to it's original take of spot on the ground. Whilst I didn't bust out a tape measure to see how many millimetres off the original take off point it was, I'm sure it landed close enough to the original mark to have played any of those instruments. |
are they controlled by computer? no, its completely done by a guy |
no, its completely done by a guy if not by computer than I would have thought multiple people, one copter per person. you tool. |
the main problem with doing this 'outside' is that the gps positioning would not be accurate enough in both time & distance. commercial gps is only accurate to about +/-3m depending on how many satellites are providing data. most copter control boards will make this a bit more accurate with their barometers & gyro sensor information but not enough to do what they are doing in that video. for that sort of positional accuracy & timing, you need a small scale gps setup inside a room. that is kmel's thing.. they also did that nano-quadcopter swarm & the co-operative copters that built a foam-rubber tower.
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i guess you could do that too. not that i know exactly what sort of sensors kmel are using... i am assuming it's something like a local gps positioning system. logistically, it would just make sense to do it inside a building where it is protected from the elements.
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