denverpilot
Tied Down
Anyone got any ideas?
Plug it into a TV via HDMI with a keyboard in the USB, log into it, and see if it's throwing any errors?
Anyone got any ideas?
Looks like the pi is dead. Red and blue light, but no signal. Need to try it on the monitor to make sure nomother signal is interferring. tomorrow, not tonight.Plug it into a TV via HDMI with a keyboard in the USB, log into it, and see if it's throwing any errors?
Looks like the pi is dead. Red and blue light, but no signal. Need to try it on the monitor to make sure nomother signal is interferring. tomorrow, not tonight.
Hooked it up to the tv last night...dead. Just happen to have a spare Pi2, will,see if that works. I tried both V o.8 and 1.0 with no luck. 0.8 was working last time I turned everything on.There were some changes to the code base to support Pi 3 recently. Judging by the conversations in the Slack channel, most of the developers are like the ones at my work and are new hardware addicts and always have new toys, so... Perhaps they have a problem with Pi 2.
I haven't really paid attention to it since my last update but someone was asking in Slack just before the weekend. Don't know what the outcome was but watch out for that in release notes and stuff.
Worth a look at the boot to see what's barfing... That, of course, would be the definitive answer.
The May Flight Training fromAOPA also has a short article. But didn't provide link to Chris' website or anything. Of course many of us built one last year when he first announced the software, which is why I'm so annoyed mine stopped working.
Hooked it up to the tv last night...dead. Just happen to have a spare Pi2, will,see if that works. I tried both V o.8 and 1.0 with no luck. 0.8 was working last time I turned everything on.
HDMI plugged into a standalone monitor.
USB keyboard.
5v/1amp power supply, fully charged.
Nothing else connected.
Red LED and blue LED lit where appropriate.
Neither Pi2 displayed anything on the monitor.
Tried both v0.8 and v1.0 SD cards, same result. zip. nada.
I need to finish up a website, then will head out to do some shopping (grocery store at the top of the list) then over to Microcenter for another pi. I also think one of the SDRs are dead - no white LED when the whole thing was powered up.
I have all the stable releases going back to last August but v0.8 seemed to work really well.
But dead board was the problem. Picked up a Pi3 at microcenter today, works great. Of course now one of the SDRs is dead.
@weirdjim
Would an inverted F antenna work for this purpose? I've seen designs that are compact and can handle 3 frequencies; commonly used in cell phones.
Here is one: https://www.google.com/patents/US20030206136
If I did the math correctly, the measurements for Figure 4 (figure 4 in the link) would be 7.6 cm (978 MHz) for #22, 6.8 cm for #23 (1090 MHz), and 5.3 cm for #24 (split the difference in the GPS wavelengths). This looks like it could be cut from a single piece of metal and folded. That gives one antenna for all 3 receivers (2 ADS B, 1 GPS) about 5 inches long.
I use a Bad Elf external GPS since my iPad doesn't have cellular, from before the Stratux. It works quite well. I'm not sure if that is what you meant by "remote mounted".I'm toying around with the idea of building a Stratux unit myself or buying a pre-built one, like @Archammer has available. My issue is whether or not I want an onboard GPS or remote-mounted. There seems to have been issues with the onboard types, according to my browsing of Reddit threads, but I'm not sure how prevalent this is. Onboard certainly saves space and wires, but reliability is king to me. What experience do you all have with one or both?
I use a Bad Elf external GPS since my iPad doesn't have cellular, from before the Stratux. It works quite well. I'm not sure if that is what you meant by "remote mounted".
Battery life using the Stratux and Bad Elf have been in excess of 5 hours for me running ForeFlight, but using an older iPad..I have a Bad Elf, as well. My iPad mini that doesn't have built-in GPS or cellular. I had been using an old Stratus 1, but it's been VERY hit-and-miss in terms of connection...even without overheating. By "remote mounted" I meant a separate GPS connected to the Stratux via a cord. If you've seen the FlightBox Stratux build kit, remote-mounted the only type of GPS they have.
I'd be fine just using the Bad Elf and a Stratux box, but would be concerned about battery life on the iPad running items through both bluetooth and wifi. Maybe it's a negligible difference - and maybe I just prefer an "all-in-one" solution. I just know that the old Stratus 1 has been giving me fits and has become fairly unreliable.
Interesting box configuration.Here is mine. Parts came in, had it assembled in about 15 minutes. So easy!
https://goo.gl/photos/zi5vscdNaRujhPjp9
It seems like port 4,000 is the only one dumping data, so listen on that one.
My iPad was down to 34% battery remaining after 3 hours, so I plugged it into a spare battery pack I brought along. Make sure your battery packs can push better than 2.1A to charge an iPad.
I had it plugged into a 2A rated USD port, it only slowed the rated of discharge.Or at least can do 1A and keep up with the rate of discharge. But the full 2A is better.
I had it plugged into a 2A rated USD port, it only slowed the rated of discharge.
I did learn that the USB port on the IFD540 will sustain an iPad, but not charge it.
Roger on up being the desired trend. I reduce operations to FF only, but run the Bluetooth for my Bad Elf GPS receiver and need the wifi for Stratux. Sometimes the electronic E6B might be on in background. I'm using an Air2.
I had not heard of the special cables to strick 2A to 2.1
Looks like the AHRS functionality of the stratux project is finally starting to show some promising results! For those that are following the slack thread, one of the contributors there has developed code that uses a combination of GPS data and data from a barometric sensor to successfully implement AHRS into the stratux box.
I'm not saying anything. I just happened to log into the Slack chat about AHRS, and it looks like they're getting some great results. Just figured I'd pass on the good news.So you're saying it won't work inverted? (The always much touted reason for having an AHRS in a portable device. "Safety when everything else fails...")
I got the upgraded GPS dongle with the larger antenna. Works way better than the tiny one. Probably not as well as the remote mount, but I didn't want all the extra cable.Rebuilt my box with new components including AHRS (which seems a little wonky - climb indicated when I would expect descent). Picked up a few airliners with the unit sitting in my kitchen.
Version 1
Version 2
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I got the upgraded GPS dongle with the larger antenna. Works way better than the tiny one. Probably not as well as the remote mount, but I didn't want all the extra cable.
I ended up zip tying the battery and case together. Then velroed the GPS antenna to the top of the case. Twist tied the extra GPS and power cables together. Shouldn't be to messy.