Grahame Smith sadly you're never at the top as you always want to go higher. I'm think of winter summit shots from a quadcopter when the likes of The Ben are 6ft deep in snow.....
Maybe not so much stabilization, you are getting warping from it. You'll need to stabilize the footage from the camera on board with a Brushless gimbal. It will hold the camera steady on the pitch roll and yaw axis, But, personally I only use a two axis for roll and pitch and control yaw with my D/R switch turned down to 60% on my radio. Nice start though and great scenery to capture over there. Good luck and welcome to the club :D Cheers Oh one more very important thing... Add a bit of music to your video and edit the scene's to only the best footage. it makes it more exciting to watch. hope this helps.
Very interesting! Been thinking about one of those for some weeks now to take into the mountains to get summit views.
Why not just climb to the top... it'd be cheaper :) But they are amazing bits of kit... and dead simple to use.
Grahame Smith
sadly you're never at the top as you always want to go higher. I'm think of winter summit shots from a quadcopter when the likes of The Ben are 6ft deep in snow.....
Maybe not so much stabilization, you are getting warping from it. You'll need to stabilize the footage from the camera on board with a Brushless gimbal. It will hold the camera steady on the pitch roll and yaw axis, But, personally I only use a two axis for roll and pitch and control yaw with my D/R switch turned down to 60% on my radio. Nice start though and great scenery to capture over there. Good luck and welcome to the club :D Cheers Oh one more very important thing... Add a bit of music to your video and edit the scene's to only the best footage. it makes it more exciting to watch. hope this helps.