X-Git-Url: https://git.gag.com/?p=fw%2Faltos;a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Faltusmetrum.xsl;h=329739e04014fde856e560aedc9e7af5a7d9256a;hp=2a02421b07be4f0255ef1b55bb63f66f3a851a71;hb=5158493c8df527e7527057c719c75248609eb3dc;hpb=5c1cf7492b82e63a9db9d0238ecbcd2b59486893
diff --git a/doc/altusmetrum.xsl b/doc/altusmetrum.xsl
index 2a02421b..329739e0 100644
--- a/doc/altusmetrum.xsl
+++ b/doc/altusmetrum.xsl
@@ -536,7 +536,7 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
or radio link via TeleDongle.
- Radio Frequencies
+ Radio Frequency
Altus Metrum boards support radio frequencies in the 70cm
band. By default, the configuration interface provides a
@@ -548,19 +548,6 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
altimeter and TeleDongle must be configured to the same
frequency to successfully communicate with each other.
-
- To set the radio frequency, use the 'c R' command to specify the
- radio transceiver configuration parameter. This parameter is computed
- using the desired frequency, 'F', the radio calibration parameter, 'C' (showed by the 'c s' command) and
- the standard calibration reference frequency, 'S', (normally 434.550MHz):
-
- R = F / S * C
-
- Round the result to the nearest integer value.
- As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
- change to the parameter block in the on-board flash on
- your altimeter board if you want the change to stay in place across reboots.
-
Apogee Delay
@@ -573,20 +560,14 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
primary and backup pyrotechnic charges do not fire simultaneously.
- To set the apogee delay, use the 'c d' command.
- As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
- change to the parameter block in the on-board DataFlash chip.
-
-
- Please note that the Altus Metrum apogee detection algorithm
- fires exactly at apogee. If you are also flying an
- altimeter like the PerfectFlite MAWD, which only supports
- selecting 0 or 1 seconds of apogee delay, you may wish to
- set the MAWD to 0 seconds delay and set the TeleMetrum to
- fire your backup 2 or 3 seconds later to avoid any chance of
- both charges firing simultaneously. We've flown several
- air-frames this way quite happily, including Keith's
- successful L3 cert.
+ The Altus Metrum apogee detection algorithm fires exactly at
+ apogee. If you are also flying an altimeter like the
+ PerfectFlite MAWD, which only supports selecting 0 or 1
+ seconds of apogee delay, you may wish to set the MAWD to 0
+ seconds delay and set the TeleMetrum to fire your backup 2
+ or 3 seconds later to avoid any chance of both charges
+ firing simultaneously. We've flown several air-frames this
+ way quite happily, including Keith's successful L3 cert.
@@ -601,11 +582,90 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
than the primary so that both pyrotechnic charges don't fire
simultaneously.
-
- To set the main deployment altitude, use the 'c m' command.
- As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
- change to the parameter block in the on-board DataFlash chip.
-
+
+
+ Maximum Flight Log
+
+ TeleMetrum version 1.1 has 2MB of on-board flash storage,
+ enough to hold over 40 minutes of data at full data rate
+ (100 samples/second). TeleMetrum 1.0 has 1MB of on-board
+ storage. As data are stored at a reduced rate during descent
+ (10 samples/second), there's plenty of space to store many
+ flights worth of data.
+
+
+ The on-board flash is partitioned into separate flight logs,
+ each of a fixed maximum size. Increase the maximum size of
+ each log and you reduce the number of flights that can be
+ stored. Decrease the size and TeleMetrum can store more
+ flights.
+
+
+ All of the configuration data is also stored in the flash
+ memory, which consumes 64kB on TeleMetrum v1.1 and 256B on
+ TeleMetrum v1.0. This configuration space is not available
+ for storing flight log data.
+
+
+ To compute the amount of space needed for a single flight,
+ you can multiply the expected ascent time (in seconds) by
+ 800, multiply the expected descent time (in seconds) by 80
+ and add the two together. That will slightly under-estimate
+ the storage (in bytes) needed for the flight. For instance,
+ a flight spending 20 seconds in ascent and 150 seconds in
+ descent will take about (20 * 800) + (150 * 80) = 28000
+ bytes of storage. You could store dozens of these flights in
+ the on-board flash.
+
+
+ The default size, 192kB, allows for 10 flights of storage on
+ TeleMetrum v1.1 and 5 flights on TeleMetrum v1.0. This
+ ensures that you won't need to erase the memory before
+ flying each time while still allowing more than sufficient
+ storage for each flight.
+
+
+ As TeleMini does not contain an accelerometer, it stores
+ data at 10 samples per second during ascent and one sample
+ per second during descent. Each sample is a two byte reading
+ from the barometer. These are stored in 5kB of
+ on-chip flash memory which can hold 256 seconds at the
+ ascent rate or 2560 seconds at the descent rate. Because of
+ the limited storage, TeleMini cannot hold data for more than
+ one flight, and so must be erased after each flight or it
+ will not capture data for subsequent flights.
+
+
+
+ Ignite Mode
+
+ Instead of firing one charge at apogee and another charge at
+ a fixed height above the ground, you can configure the
+ altimeter to fire both at apogee or both during
+ descent. This was added to support an airframe that has two
+ TeleMetrum computers, one in the fin can and one in the
+ nose.
+
+
+ Providing the ability to use both igniters for apogee or
+ main allows some level of redundancy without needing two
+ flight computers. In Redundant Apogee or Redundant Main
+ mode, the two charges will be fired two seconds apart.
+
+
+
+ Pad Orientation
+
+ TeleMetrum measures acceleration along the axis of the
+ board. Which way the board is oriented affects the sign of
+ the acceleration value. Instead of trying to guess which way
+ the board is mounted in the air frame, TeleMetrum must be
+ explicitly configured for either Antenna Up or Antenna
+ Down. The default, Antenna Up, expects the end of the
+ TeleMetrum board connected to the 70cm antenna to be nearest
+ the nose of the rocket, with the end containing the screw
+ terminals nearest the tail.
+
@@ -1107,31 +1167,6 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
size. A smaller value will allow more flights to be stored,
a larger value will record data from longer flights.
-
- During ascent, TeleMetrum records barometer and
- accelerometer values 100 times per second, other analog
- information (voltages and temperature) 6 times per second
- and GPS data once per second. During descent, the non-GPS
- data is recorded 1/10th as often. Each barometer +
- accelerometer record takes 8 bytes.
-
-
- The default, 192kB, will store over 200 seconds of data at
- the ascent rate, or over 2000 seconds of data at the descent
- rate. That's plenty for most flights. This leaves enough
- storage for five flights in a 1MB system, or 10 flights in a
- 2MB system.
-
-
- The configuration block takes the last available block of
- memory, on v1.0 boards that's just 256 bytes. However, the
- flash part on the v1.1 boards uses 64kB for each block.
-
-
- TeleMini has 5kB of on-board storage, which is plenty for a
- single flight. Make sure you download and delete the data
- before a subsequent flight or it will not log any data.
-
Ignite Mode
@@ -2199,6 +2234,43 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
Verify you can connect and disconnect from the units while in your
terminal program by sending the escape-disconnect mentioned above.
+
+ To set the radio frequency, use the 'c R' command to specify the
+ radio transceiver configuration parameter. This parameter is computed
+ using the desired frequency, 'F', the radio calibration parameter, 'C' (showed by the 'c s' command) and
+ the standard calibration reference frequency, 'S', (normally 434.550MHz):
+
+ R = F / S * C
+
+ Round the result to the nearest integer value.
+ As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
+ change to the parameter block in the on-board flash on
+ your altimeter board if you want the change to stay in place across reboots.
+
+
+ To set the apogee delay, use the 'c d' command.
+ As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
+ change to the parameter block in the on-board DataFlash chip.
+
+
+ To set the main deployment altitude, use the 'c m' command.
+ As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
+ change to the parameter block in the on-board DataFlash chip.
+
+
+ To calibrate the radio frequency, connect the UHF antenna port to a
+ frequency counter, set the board to 434.550MHz, and use the 'C'
+ command to generate a CW carrier. Wait for the transmitter temperature
+ to stabilize and the frequency to settle down.
+ Then, divide 434.550 MHz by the
+ measured frequency and multiply by the current radio cal value show
+ in the 'c s' command. For an unprogrammed board, the default value
+ is 1186611. Take the resulting integer and program it using the 'c f'
+ command. Testing with the 'C' command again should show a carrier
+ within a few tens of Hertz of the intended frequency.
+ As with all 'c' sub-commands, follow this with a 'c w' to write the
+ change to the parameter block in the on-board DataFlash chip.
+
Note that the 'reboot' command, which is very useful on the altimeters,
will likely just cause problems with the dongle. The *correct* way
@@ -2265,7 +2337,7 @@ NAR #88757, TRA #12200
strength providing an indication of the direction from receiver to rocket.
- TeleMetrum also provides GPS trekking data, which can further simplify
+ TeleMetrum also provides GPS tracking data, which can further simplify
locating the rocket once it has landed. (The last good GPS data
received before touch-down will be on the data screen of 'ao-view'.)