Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

250 racers what is faster?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 250 racers what is faster?

    i was flicking through some heli sites and picked up on fpv googles that were operated by head movements.
    what is faster head inputs or hand inputs.
    it got me thinking for obvious brain activity routes. can the brain process a head movement quicker than the time it takes to process and deliver a hand movement.
    what say you?
    has anyone tried these googles? they may not be quick enough but it is an interesting thought.

    The older guys will remember when most sci fi films hadn't even got to this stage of evolution if any lol
    1x EGS, TREX 450 PRO DFC & 130X. DX9 radio. No idea what i am doing trying to fly

  • #2
    Blimey this is a new one on me, so as you turn your head the quad follows your line of sight...? IMO unless it's connected with the brain I can't see if etherway would be quicker, but be interesting on how it actually works with the head.!
    Today's outlook is fine for flying.
    • Spektrum DX18 gen2, Phoenix Sims, Align MR25XP.
    • Blade Nano, mCP X, 130x, Blade 180, Mini T 450se
    • Trex 250dfc Gpro, Trex 500EFL Gpro.
    • Trex 600E Gpro DFC, Trex 600NSP now Gpro, DFC, Redline 56
    • Flickr Through My Pictures.
    • A helicopter is an aircraft that is lifted and propelled by one or more horizontal rotors because Wikipedia said so.

    Comment


    • #3
      I think the nerve distance will have a negligible effect, and any possible benefit will be quickly cancelled out by having to learn to fly all over again.

      But the bigger problem is that moving your head like that is going to play merry hell with your inner ear. The movements your head is making will not match what your eyes are seeing, and I reckon you'd make yourself seriously travel sick within a few minutes.

      The way these head tracking goggles are usually used is to allow you to move your head around a little and look about yourself while flying. It helps reduce travel sickness, and makes it feel a lot more natural. High end systems use a physical gimbal to move the camera, but even some of the tiny quadcopters support headtracking, but they do it digitally. They just use a camera on board with a higher resolution than the goggles can display, and as you turn your head it scrolls your field of view around.
      Helis: Oxy 2 FE / Oxy 2 Sport / Protos 380 / Oxy 4 Max / Gaui X3 380mm
      Electronics:
      Spartan VX1e / Spartan VX1n / Spartan VX1p / MSH Brain2 mini / Jeti DS-14
      Sims: Realflight / AccuRC
      / Phoenix RC (Wireless) | AccuRC (Wireless) | Realflight (Wireless)

      Team rep for Lynx/Oxy, Founder of NightWave Systems, #450guy

      Comment


      • #4
        Aren't nerve impulses electrical? Fairly sure that's comparable to light speed. Thus practically no time difference in the nerve pathway distance.
        Spektrum IX12
        Blade Inductrix
        T-Rex 150X
        T-Rex 450L, Heli Option Turn-buckles, carbon push rod, 6s, Stock Electrics, Giant Power Lipos
        Goblin 380 Kyle Stacy, 360mm, 6s, AR7210BX, Align 430m/525m @ 6.0v, Castle Talon 90, Scorpion 3020-1000, Optipower 2700 30c
        Goblin 570 Carbon Red, Stretched to 600mm, Blackline 3D Blades, 12s, BD 3SX, Align 800/850 HV servos @ 8.0v Castle 120 Phoenix Edge HV, Scorpion, Thunderpower G8s
        T-Rex 800e Pro DFC, Hobbywing 200A, 760x Head, BeastX

        Comment


        • #5
          not light speed no, muscle commands generally travel at around 110-120m/s... but that still means they reach your muscles at the furthest extent of your body within a few ms.

          The head tracking in the goggles isn't actually designed for flying the machines, it's primarily there for head tracking cameras. Ie you have the FPV camera on a set of servos and the camera will look where you look. Alternatively some use it for the gimbal and HD camera to make filming easier - they can just turn their head to keep the subject in frame. Most head tracking systems will lack the resolution, speed of response and ultimately accuracy needed for racing. Lots will drift sightly as well.

          I have seen guys adapt the head tracking outputs to fly instead, but that is generally for fun (or in one case a guy that was partially paralysed) and I've only seen it used on stabilised craft (e.g. flying in a self levelling or gps mode). Almost everyone that flies 250 racers as they are intended to be used fly in acro modes that do not have active stabilisation as it tends to fight you constantly when flying in that way.

          I imagine if you try to fly a small 250 racer in manual modes using head tracking it will end in a lot of crashes and not a lot of flying.
          Ridding the world of Helis, one crash at a time....

          sigpic Proud owner of an EGS and a platinum EGS!!!

          Comment


          • #6
            Thanks for the answers.
            I imagine it wont take long for some fpv research to bring the concept up to speed.
            I suppose it would take a lot of accuracy and fun out of it.
            Maybe best left to the mililtary
            1x EGS, TREX 450 PRO DFC & 130X. DX9 radio. No idea what i am doing trying to fly

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by james_2k View Post
              Aren't nerve impulses electrical? Fairly sure that's comparable to light speed. Thus practically no time difference in the nerve pathway distance.
              Apparently it's not that simple, they do actually travel relativly slowly, depending on what nerve we are talking about. That is based on some kids science program i saw on TV, which might not be the most authoratitive source, but Google seems to confirm: Speed of Nerve Impulses

              But i'd still suspect that it's quicker to move the fingers than it would be to swing your big old heavy head around. Even in the military the main flying control that requires speed and precision is still to my best knowledge done with the hand/fingers... no?
              Goblin Kraken, SoXos Strike 7, XLPower Specter, Goblin Black Thunder T, Goblin 700 Speed, Goblin 770 Comp Carbon, Trex 700X, Kasama Dune, Henseleit TDR

              Comment


              • #8
                But i'd still suspect t
                hat it's quicker to move the fingers than it would be to swing your big old heavy head around. Even in the military the main flying control that requires speed and precision is still to my best knowledge done with the hand/fingers... no?
                Apache pilots fly with their hands, feet and left eye. The right eye looks at a monocle which is linked to the Integrated Helmet and Display Sighting System (IHADSS) which can bring up whatever data from all sorts of systems that they need. They can slave the gun to their monocle and chuck 600 30mm rounds per minute at whatever they happen to be looking at. I want one for my Trex.

                Talking about Trex's and nerve impulses, if you tread on a brontosaurus's tail, he doesn't know about it for a couple of minutes. (No I haven't been down the pub. That was yesterday.)
                Graham

                Protos Max V2 800 conversion. Bavarian Demon 3SX
                Compass 7HV V1 Bavarian Demon 3SX
                Titan X50E Bavarian Demon 3SX
                Trex 500L Bavarian Demon 3SX
                Trex 450SE Flybar
                Align M470 Multi with GoPro, G2 Gimbal, Align OSD/FPV Tx, APS-M
                Futaba 14SG

                Comment

                Working...
                X