In the latest litchi 1.15.5:I was not aware that Litchi supported changes in elevation from the home point. Where do you set that?
I'm curious. Why do so many folks use Litchi or similar products? I fly with a terrific hood on my iPad Air 2 and fly FPV. I can see the terrain, make adjustments on the fly, circle an interesting point control my altitude etc. Am I missing something? Definitely not knocking any such type of autonomous flight but just curious![]()
Um... Where's this "three" at again?ordered a new?? come on. slingshot with bocce balls, boomerang, baseballs, Frisbees, knock it lose...climb! do something.
Haha, quick with it.It's in between two and four....
Nothin/nobody except for the pilot in command takes trees into account. Altitudes in maps like Google are DEMs that only report the 'derived' ground elevations. Even those need to be taken with a grain of salt (maybe on the rim of a margarita?). none of them are actually surveyed.I know what happened I think. Litchi programmed the altitude of the climb on the hill but didn't take the trees into the factor. Litchi only judges the height raised on the actual ground. It doesn't do it for trees as obviously trees grow so it will be different each time. Really sorry to hear about your loss. That's why I never trust the automatic terrain change on litchi. It did calculate for me a few times when I used it, but I still bottled out and decided to go at a set height then lower the height slightly for the next mission.
Don't give up tho mate. You can still get it back. It's not the trees stopping you from getting your drone back, it's your imagination stopping you getting it back. Think really carefully... Have a beer or two, try not to get to worked up and calmly think of a way of getting back, tree surgeon could get it? Can you get a ladder? No such thing as "impossible" only "puzzles"
Can you give us a google earth link or some kind of pic so we can see what the terrain is like? Then we can all pitch in and come up with a plan. Your not the first to be in this situation and their has been lots of rescue missions where the bird did get back to the owner. Don't give up mate. We will work this out [emoji4]
I always take trees into account. After all.. They do grow [emoji6]Nothin/nobody except for the pilot in command takes trees into account. Altitudes in maps like Google are DEMs that only report the 'derived' ground elevations. Even those need to be taken with a grain of salt (maybe on the rim of a margarita?). none of them are actually surveyed.
Does this also work from the mission hub?In the latest litchi 1.15.5:
Open up your mission
Select the spanner icon and hit the box shaped icon
Hit select all.
Hit edit and hit the Ground tab.
If you are happy with the altitude setting, hit apply and your waypoints will reflect the Google ground settings. I add an extra 10 mtrs to be safe and be aware of any man made structures in your flight path.
In the latest litchi 1.15.5:
Open up your mission
Select the spanner icon and hit the box shaped icon
Hit select all.
Hit edit and hit the Ground tab.
If you are happy with the altitude setting, hit apply and your waypoints will reflect the Google ground settings. I add an extra 10 mtrs to be safe and be aware of any man made structures in your flight path.
I don't use mission hub but I watched a tutorial where it was set up using it, so that would be a yes.Does this also work from the mission hub?
I generally only use Litchi because I like to fly long touring flights. If the flight is planned properly you should avoid any terrain/trees and if in doubt just fly higher. The reason I use Litchi is because the bird will continue the planned mission even if the signal is lost which happens to me quite frequently.I'm curious. Why do so many folks use Litchi or similar products? I fly with a terrific hood on my iPad Air 2 and fly FPV. I can see the terrain, make adjustments on the fly, circle an interesting point control my altitude etc. Am I missing something? Definitely not knocking any such type of autonomous flight but just curious![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.