Cyclic Phase
For many multirotor heads cyclic phase is 0°, because phasing is done mechanically.
So you have to check what your rotor head require to operate correctly.
Manufacturer of the rotor head should tell you all the details.
So you have to check what your rotor head require to operate correctly.
Manufacturer of the rotor head should tell you all the details.
Spirit System developer
Have a look on my explanation to find right phase:
http://www.spirit-system.com/phpBB3/vie ... 481#p13481
http://www.spirit-system.com/phpBB3/vie ... 481#p13481
Oxy4max SpiritPro + HW // SOXOS 550, SpiritPro, HW120A V4, 920KV // SOXOS 600, SpiritPro, HW160A, Pyro650 // SOXOS Strike7, SpiritPro, HW160A, Pyro750 // Skywing Spirit Aero // FrSky Horus X10S + Taranis X7 /
AFAIK, both manufacturers specify that to go from their two blades head to their three blades head the only needed change is to reduce the cyclic gain.
Oxy 2 ♦ X-Vert ♦ Warp 360 ♦ Blade 450X ♦ Blade 450X Nightflyer ♦ Goblin 500 (RIP) ♦ 2 X mCPX v2 ♦ night fly mQX ♦ LadyMQX ♦ nano QX ♦ nano QX FPV ♦ Inductrix ♦ DX8 G1
Where did you see any ambiguos note?
The FBL has nothing to do differently than with a two blades head, if everything has been done mechanically... why should Spirit be different?
The FBL has nothing to do differently than with a two blades head, if everything has been done mechanically... why should Spirit be different?
Oxy 2 ♦ X-Vert ♦ Warp 360 ♦ Blade 450X ♦ Blade 450X Nightflyer ♦ Goblin 500 (RIP) ♦ 2 X mCPX v2 ♦ night fly mQX ♦ LadyMQX ♦ nano QX ♦ nano QX FPV ♦ Inductrix ♦ DX8 G1
Spirit has adaptive regulation that is able to tune itself to a certain degree. So this is reason, why it can fly well with the same cyclic gain.
But generally you have to lower the gain. So everything is true.
But generally you have to lower the gain. So everything is true.
Spirit System developer
