ZeXx86 wrote:
Hello,
if you put the model near 360° or near 0° then the values will be anything between, because the heading is not perfectly stable.
To move between 0° and 360° it takes some time. So you could see random angles if you put the model exactly at this angle.
If you rotate it by few degrees more than it should be stable.
Update from the new tests (I describe it in detail to help other users which have possibly the same symptoms):
1st Test new Laptop: Test at same location with the rest of the equipment not changed (same Spirit Interface, still longer Geolink cable, still same Position of the GeoLink, aso.) => Heading showed a much more stable value. It flickered only in between +-5°. So I was very happy at first moment and made the conclusion that the laptop switch was the solution. I switched back to the old Laptop to make a check and to verify the bad behavior on that Laptop.
2nd Test old Laptop: To my big surprise also the old Laptop showed stable values this time. I have not changed another thing since the last test except of the Laptop exchange. Then I wanted to make the 90° North test again and recognized that heading only showed values between around 120 and 340° no mater which direction the Heli pointed to (full circle). So after a night of thinking about it I decided to test it again today on another location (this time indoor) with same results. Then I made a new re-calibration with the result, that I have now full 360° and it only flickers if the Heli stands in between 350° and 10° which I think is the behavior described in the post I quoted above. On the rest of the directions it is stable in between 5°.
=> My conclusion or trial to explain the symptoms: Can't say what the initial cause was but in my opinion on the first tries something was wrong with the compass. Might be possible that it somehow stuck around 0° and showed the same behavior as now if I point it around 0°. But at these first tries I also moved the model in full circle and it flickered all the time. I made many tests this time and powered the link off and on again and again. When I did the re-calibration with the compass not working correctly, wrong values were learned and therefore the heading at the second session showed only values between 120-340°. The second re-calibration with the compass working solved that problem also.
So long words short: The compass heading is now more or less stable and also shows more or less accurate values. I have to organize a analog compass now to verify the 90° North exactly (because I don't fully trust in the calibration at the moment) . If any one has an explanation what was wrong at the first tries it may possibly help other users.