- Sky-Drones Platform
- Hardware
- hardware purchasing and production options
- software deployment options
- SmartAP AIRLink
- hardware
- Interfaces
- Installation
- Initial Power Up
Sky-Drones Platform
The Sky-Drones Platform helps to integrate drones in custom end-to-end workflows with an abundance of advanced features that are essential to enterprise customers including:
- Real-time digital HD video streaming;
- Real-time payload data processing (e.g. computer vision);
- Real-time flight control (e.g. target tracking, collision prevention and obstacle avoidance);
- In-flight telemetry and payload data streaming directly to customer’s cloud;
- Drone-to-drone communications;
- Running custom apps directly on the drone (edge computing);
- Safely performing autonomous BVLOS missions with real-time control.
Sky-Drones Platform Structure
Software
* Advanced drone software powered by SmartAP AIRLink . * GCS - super easy and intuitive 3D mission planning and remote flight control applications for Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android + web application in the skydrone-cloud. : * 3D mission planning & control web application; * Drone fleet management, performance monitoring, post-flight AI-analytics; * Integration services, the “glue” that connects drones, apps, partners and customers’ software (see how was designed for customers).
- Tightly integrated partner software such as UTM services, fleet management solutions, flight logs, etc.
Hardware
Sky-Drones provides its users with a comprehensive set of leading drone avionics, entirely designed and manufactured in the UK:
-
SmartAP Airlink - the most advanced AI drone flight controller;
- AIRLink Telemetery System - broadband AES-256 encrypted digital datalink for 20km;
-
SmartLink - broadband digital datalink with an onboard computer and LTE option for third-party autopilots;
- SmartAP PDB - power distribution board with the voltage / current sensor and power supply;
- SmartAP GNSS - high-precision GNSS, barometer and magnetometer module.
Sky-Drones ships its partner drones and accessory equipment (for instance, uAvinoix pingRX ADS-B receiver). We are listed sellers for our partners so make sure you to find out more!
Sky-Drones Platform Options
Sky-Drones Platform is fully compatible with different types of aircraft. Sky-Drones customers have been using the platform for years in BVLOS and EVLOS flights, alongside fully autonomous and GNSS-assisted manual missions.
Sky-Drones offers two major purchasing options:
- Quick-start using comprehensive ready-made hardware and free software sets;
- Attractive terms for bulk purchasing customers and customization requirements:
- on-site production;
- deep hardware and software customization;
- integration with customer’s infrastructure. For further information please see:
hardware purchasing and production options
Hardware Purchasing and Production Options
Learn more about the different option for getting Sky-Drones Hardware Sky-Drones offer two major purchasing options:
- Purchasing hardware from Sky-Drones website or via international dealers;
- On-site production.
Purchasing Hardware from Sky-Drones
We appreciate the different integration levels required by the drone manufacturers. Therefore we offer two slightly different editions of AIRLink - the most advanced drone avionics: Enterprise and Core. AIRLink Enterprise is ideal for a quick start, evaluation and prototyping while Core is optimised for deep integration and mid-high volume manufacturing.
Parameter | AIRLink Enterprise | AIRLink Core |
Enclosure | Aluminum, with integrated heatsink and fan mounting option. | External heatsink or reasonable power dissipation should be provided by the design. |
Dimensions | L103 x W61 x H37 mm | L100 x W57 x H22 mm |
Weight | 198 g | 89 g |
Operating temperature | -40°C-..+50°C | -40°C-..+50°C |
Production volume | Low to Medium | Medium to High |
SmartAP AIRLink Core edition is intended for medium to high volume production and deep integration with customer’s hardware. The weight of electronics is only 80g and can be tightly integrated in the airframe design. However, heat dissipation requirements (provided by Sky-Drones) should be met for proper system operation.
- Purchasing hardware from Sky-Drones website or via international dealers;
On-site production
- Licensed Production The Sky-Drones team helps setting up the production on-site and performs turnkey production commissioning. Manufacturing technology is not disclosed. This option allows customer to optimize the logistics and produce the system locally.
- Reference Design The Sky-Drones team installs all the equipment on-site and performs turnkey production commissioning as well as transferring production technology.
This option is intended for:
- Drone manufacturers;
- High-volume production;
- Excessively tight integrations.
You can:
- Manufacture at your own factory;
- Control the volume;
- Modify schematics and layout to suit your needs.
You receive:
- Schematics / layout / CAD / BOM;
- Engineering support from the Sky-Drones team.
This option would suit well to large volume orders, e.g. UAV fleets. Interested? Hardware customizations In any of the above cases, the Sky-Drones team would be glad to slightly or deeply customize hardware to fit the customer’s requirements.
software deployment options
-
Software Deployment Options Learn more about the different options of running Sky-Drones software
-
Quick and easy start Sky-Drones software comes free with the hardware. You can use the most advanced ready-made hardware and a free comprehensive set of SmartAP GCS + Sky-Drones Cloud software package. UAV manufacturers can use all Sky-Drones software (including Sky-Drones Cloud) within their hardware absolutely for free
-
Sky-Drones Platform On-Premise Deploy the platform on your server and use it privately. You can your own Sky-Drones Cloud!
-
Software customization and integrations The Sky-Drones team implements software customizations according to your requirements and custom integrations with your IT systems.
-
Your custom drone software
smartAP_Airlink has cutting-edge equipment and system software. It allows you to enable drones for advanced scenarios involving AI and connectivity features. The following options are available:
- Your team develops custom drone software and installs on AIRLink;
- Sky-Drones team develops custom drone software for you;
- You buy ready-made software from Sky-Drones partners. Interested?
SmartAP AIRLink
The most Advanced AI Drone Flight Controller AIRLink stands for Artificial Intelligence & Remote Link. The unit includes a cutting-edge drone autopilot, AI mission computer and LTE connectivity unit. Start your enterprise drone operations with AIRLink and reduce the time to market from years and months down to weeks.
- SmartAP AIRLink launch video
AIRLink product launch video (< 2 min) SmartAP AIRLink Launch Webinar (LIVE) On April 14th, 2021 Kirill Shilov, Founder & CEO Sky-Drones held a live launch webinar where he presented the three-in-one revolutionary product to the drone industry. Watch the full webinar recording on YouTube if you missed the live event.
AIRLink launch webinar SmartAP AIRLink - How it’s made Take a look at AIRLink manufacturing process.
SmartAP AIRLink - How it’s made Datasheet Please refer to the PDF datasheet below for the detailed technical specifications.
hardware
- Hardware SmartAP AIRLink hardware architecture overview
General specifications smartAP AirLink has two computers and integrated LTE Module:
- The flight control computer (autopilot) has a triple-redundant vibration-dampened and temperature-stabilized IMU.
- The powerful AI mission computer enables like computer vision and obstacle avoidance, digital HD video streaming, and payload data streaming.
- LTE and WiFi connectivity modules provide permanent broadband internet connection which is enabler for remote workflows.
System specifications
Parameter | Value |
Navigation | Accelerometers, Gyroscopes, Magnetometer, GNSS, Rangefinders, Lidars, Optical Flow, Visual |
IMU | 3x-Redundant / Vibration dampened / Temperature stabilized |
GNSS | GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou, / RTK (option) |
Flight Modes | Manual, Stabilize, GNSS-Assisted, Autonomous Waypoints, Guided, Terrain Following |
Flight Logs | SD Card, up to 256GB |
Ambient temperature | from -40°C up to +50°C |
Power consumption | 0.6A@12 Volts, 8W (with WiFi, 2 cameras, LTE) |
ECCN | 7E994 |
Flight Controller specifications
Parameter | Value |
Frequency | 216 MHz |
Flash | 2MB |
RAM | 512 kB |
IMU | 3 Accelerometers, 3 Gyroscopes, 3 Magnetometers, 2 Barometers |
Ethernet | 10/100 Mbps |
LAN with Mission AI Computer | UARTs |
Telemetry 1, Telemetry 2 (AI Mission Computer), Telemetry 3, GPS 1, GPS 2, Extra UART, Serial | Debug Console |
CAN | CAN 1, CAN 2 |
USB | MAVLink, Serial Console |
RC Input | SBUS, RSSI, PPM, Spektrum |
AI Mission Computer specifications
Parameter | Value |
CPU | 6-Core: Dual-Core Cortex-A72 Quad-Core Cortex-A53 |
GPU | Mali-T864, OpenGL ES1.1/2.0/3.0/3.1 |
VPU | 4K VP8/9 4K 10bits H265/H264 60fps Decoding |
Power | Software Reset Power Down RTC Wake-Up Sleep Mode |
RAM | Dual-Channel 4GB LPDDR4 |
Storage | 16GB eMMC 5.1 Flash, MicroSD up to 256GB |
Ethernet | 10/100/1000 Native Gigabit |
Wireless (WiFi/BT) 802.11a/b/g/n/ac Bluetooth 2x2 MIMO | |
USB | USB 3.0 Type C |
Video 4-Lane MIPI CSI (FPV Camera) 4-Lane MIPI SI with HMDI Input (Payload Camera) |
LTE Connectivity specifications
Parameter | Value |
LTE | UMTS/HSPA(+), GSM/GPRS/EDGE |
SIM Cards | Integrated eSIM, External MicroSIM card slot |
Antenna | 2x2 MIMO |
Bands | EMEA, North America, Australia, Japan, Other |
- SmartAP AIRLink Datasheet SmartAP AIRLink Datasheet.pdf
SmartAP AIRLink Enterprise and Core
We appreciate the different integration levels required by the drone manufacturers. Therefore we offer two slightly different editions of AIRLink - the most advanced drone avionics: Enterprise and Core. AIRLink Enterprise is ideal for a quick start, evaluation and prototyping while Core is optimised for deep integration and mid-high volume manufacturing.
Parameter | AIRLink Enterprise | AIRLink Core |
Enclosure | Aluminum, with integrated heatsink and an mounting option. | External heatsink or reasonable power dissipation should be provided by the design. |
Dimensions | L103 x W61 x H37 mm | L100 x W57 x H22 mm |
Weight | 198 g | 89 g |
Ambient temperature | -40°C-..+50°C | -40°C-..+50°C |
Production volume | Low to Medium | Medium to High |
Enterprise
’s Enterprise edition is intended for prototyping and low to medium volume drone production. Quick and easy installation thanks to the dedicated mounting holes and integrated heatsink for power dissipation.
Core
SmartAP Airlink’s Core edition is intended for medium to high volume production and deep integration with customer’s hardware. It weighs only 89 g and can be attached to a metal frame for optimum cooling. Looking for CAD model? It’s available .
Hardware feature highlights
- Easy to mount
I 4xM3 mounting holes
- Front-facing FPV Camera
Front-facing FPV camera included in the set
Interfaces
This page describes general information and interface location of SmartAP AIRLink.
Connectors pinout
Left side
- Left side
- Power input with voltage & current monitoring
- AI Mission Computer micro SD card
- Flight Controller micro SD card
- AI Mission Computer USB Type-C
- PPM input, SBUS output, RSSI monitor
POWER - JST GH SM10B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 12V | IN | +12V | Main power input |
2 | 12V | IN | +12V | Main power input |
3 | 12V | IN | +12V | Main power input |
4 | BAT_CURRENT | IN | +3.3V | Battery current monitoring |
5 | BAT_VOLTAGE | IN | +3.3V | Battery voltage monitoring |
6 | 3V3 | OUT | +3.3V | 3.3V output |
7 | PWR_KEY | IN | +3.3V | Power key input |
8 | GND | | | Ground |
9 | GND | | | Ground |
10 | GND | | | Ground |
- CPU SD card - microSD
- CPU USB - USB Type C
- RC Connector - JST GH SM06B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | 5V output |
2 | PPM_IN | IN | +3.3V | PPM input |
3 | RSSI_IN | IN | +3.3V | RSSI input |
4 | FAN_OUT | OUT | +5V | Fan output |
5 | SBUS_OUT | OUT | +3.3V | SBUS output |
6 | GND | | | Ground |
-
FMU SD card - microSD Right side
-
Right side
- Ethernet port with power output
- Telemetry port
- Second GPS port
- Spare I2C / UART port
- Flight controller USB Type-C
- Micro SIM Card
- HDMI input port (payload camera)
ETHERNET - JST GH SM08B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Radio module power supply |
2 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Radio module power supply |
3 | ETH_TXP | OUT | +3.3V | Ethernet transmit positive |
4 | ETH_TXN | OUT | +3.3V | Ethernet transmit negative |
5 | ETH_RXP | IN | +3.3V | Ethernet receive positive |
6 | ETH_RXN | IN | +3.3V | Ethernet receive negative |
7 | GND | | | Ground |
8 | GND | | | Ground |
Ethernet interface is decoupled with capacitors. Ethernet cable should be twisted to reduce EMI noise. Shorter cables are recommended for increased performance and higher bandwidth of the interface.
TEL3 - JST GH SM06B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | USART2_TX | OUT | +3.3V | Telemetry 3 TX |
3 | USART2_RX | IN | +3.3V | Telemetry 3 RX |
4 | USART2_CTS | IN | +3.3V | Telemetry 3 CTS |
5 | USART2_RTS | OUT | +3.3V | Telemetry 3 RTS |
6 | GND | | | Ground |
I2C3 / UART4 - JST GH SM06B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | USART4_TX | OUT | +3.3V | UART 4 TX |
3 | USART4_RX | IN | +3.3V | UART 4 RX |
4 | I2C3_SCL | I/O | +3.3V | I2C3 Clock |
5 | I2C3_SDA | I/O | +3.3V | I2C3 Data |
6 | GND | | | Ground |
GPS2 - JST GH SM06B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | USART8_TX | OUT | +3.3V | UART 8 TX GPS2 |
3 | USART8_RX | IN | +3.3V | UART 8 RX GPS2 |
4 | I2C2_SCL | I/O | +3.3V | I2C2 Clock |
5 | I2C2_SDA | I/O | +3.3V | I2C2 Data |
6 | GND | | | Ground |
- FMU USB - USB Type C
- SIM Card - micro SIM
- HDMI - mini HDMI
- Front side
Front side
- Main GNSS and compass port
- Main telemetry port
- CSI camera input
- CAN 1
- CAN 2
TEL1 - JST GH SM06B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | USART7_TX | OUT | +3.3V | Telemetry 1 TX |
3 | USART7_RX | IN | +3.3V | Telemetry 1 RX |
4 | USART7_CTS | IN | +3.3V | Telemetry 1 CTS |
5 | USART7_RTS | OUT | +3.3V | Telemetry 1 RTS |
6 | GND | | | Ground |
GPS1 - JST GH SM10B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | USART1_TX | OUT | +3.3V | GPS 1 TX |
3 | USART1_RX | IN | +3.3V | GPS 1 RX |
4 | I2C1_SCL | I/O | +3.3V | MAG 1 Clock |
5 | I2C1_SDA | I/O | +3.3V | MAG 1 Data |
6 | SAFETY_BTN | IN | +3.3V | Safety button |
7 | SAFETY_LED | OUT | +3.3V | Safety LED |
8 | +3V3 | OUT | +3.3V | 3.3V output |
9 | BUZZER | OUT | +5V | Buzzer output |
10 | GND | | | Ground |
CAN1 - JST GH SM04B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | CAN1_H | I/O | +5V | CAN 1 High (120Ω) |
3 | CAN1_L | I/O | +5V | CAN 1 Low (120Ω) |
4 | GND | | | Ground |
CAN2 - JST GH SM04B-GHS-TB
Pin number | Pin name | Direction | Voltage level | Function |
1 | 5V | OUT | +5V | Power supply output |
2 | CAN2_H | I/O | +5V | CAN 2 High (120Ω) |
3 | CAN2_L | I/O | +5V | CAN 2 Low (120Ω) |
4 | GND | | | Ground |
CAMERA - FPC 30 pin, 0.5mm pitch Rear side
Read side _ SBUS input _ 16 PWM output channels _ 2x LTE antenna sockets (MIMO) _ WiFi antenna socket (AP & Station modes)
Serial ports mapping
SmartAP AIRLink has a large number of serial ports with the following pinout:
UART Port | Path | Description |
UART1 | /dev/ttyS0 | GPS 1 |
UART2 | /dev/ttyS1 | Telemetry 3 |
UART3 | /dev/ttyS2 | Debug console (internal connector) |
UART4 | /dev/ttyS3 | Telemetry 4 |
UART5 | /dev/ttyS4 | Telemetry 2 (used internally with Mission Computer) |
UART6 | /dev/ttyS5 | PWM IO Module (used internally) |
UART7 | /dev/ttyS6 | Telemetry 1 |
UART8 | /dev/ttyS7 | GPS 2 |
air module content
verything you need to setup and start using SmartAP AIRLink Unboxing Video
AIRLink Set content
SmartAP AIRLink set includes everything needed to setup the system and get prepared for the flight. Standard set contains:
- 1x AIRLink Enterprise unit
- 1x FPV camera with CSI cable
- 1x WiFi antenna with MMCX connector
- 2x LTE antenna with MMCX connector
- 1x HDMI to mini HDMI cable
- 1x set of cables (7 cables for all connectors)
- 1x JST-GH to Ethernet RJ45 dongle
AIRLink Telemetry set content AIRLink Telemetry provides broadband AES-256 encrypted private channel for 20km. If LTE connectivity is sufficient for your applications then you don’t need AIRLink Telemetry set.
- 1x Ground module
- 1x Air module
- 2x Ground module antennas
- 2x Air module antennas
- 1x Telemetry cable
- 1x Ground module power cable
Installation
Let’s install and setup SmartAP AIRLink
Minimum Installation Setup
- Connect WiFi and LTE antennas Take SmartAP AIRLink Enterprise and connect WiFi and LTE antennas.
SmartAP AIRLink with antennas from the set
WARNING: DO NOT power the AIRLink without antennas! Powering up the system without antennas may cause malfunction of the radio modules and permanent damage. Powering up without antennas voids warranty.
Connect the WiFi antenna to the WiFi socket (middle) by gently pushing on the antenna connector:
AIRLink with WiFi antenna connected:
Connect LTE antennas to LTE1 and LTE2 sockets (sides):
- Connect FPV camera Camera connection is not necessary but recommended. This will allow you to test your setup and video streaming after the initial software setup described in the following sections. First of all, take something sharp and unlock the CSI camera port connector by pulling it a bit at each side:
Then insert the FPC cable from the camera and gently push back the black part of the connector mechanism until it locks itself tightly:
Repeat the same procedure with the camera socket. Once done you should have the camera connected to AIRLink.
- Connect power supply Take the main power supply cable and connect this to the power source.
- Connect power cable to 12V output of SmartAP PDB.
- Connect power monitor cable (voltage and current) to the dedicated pins on SmartAP PDB.
Next, connect the power cable to AIRLink as shown on the image below:
Proceed to the initial power up or set up the other peripherals.
Full installation setup
- Connect GNSS Receiver Take SmartAP GNSS Module with GNSS cable:
Connect it to the GPS 1 port on the front side of AIRLink:
Assembled component will look as follows:
- Connect RC Receiver Install RC receiver and connect it to the SBUS port of AIRLink on the rear side:
Fully assembled component will look as follows:
If you’re using any other than SBUS type of the receiver, please refer to the Interfaces section for more info.
- Connect Telemetry Radio Module Connect AIRLink telemetry module to Ethernet port of SmartAP AIRLink as shown on the image below:
Please refer to the dedicated page for more detailed instructions regarding Air module connection:
- Connect HDMI Payload Camera Take HDMI cable, HDMI-in capable video camera and SmartAP AIRLink.
Connect HDMI cable to AIRLink input port:
Fully assembled component will look as follows:
- Insert microSD card Insert microSD card into FMU SD slot. This SD card is needed for flight logging.
Inserted microSD card will looks as follows:
- Insert SIM Card Insert SIM Card into SIM Card slot as shown on the image below:
Inserted SIM Card will looks as follows:
Initial Power Up
Powering up SmartAP AIRLink for the first time after wiring the peripherals
Make sure you have completed all steps and connected antennas before proceeding with the power up.
- Power up the AIRLink You will see that various LEDs will turn on and some of them will start blinking. This means that the AIRLink is live and booting up. In particular, make sure that the PWR green LED is solid. This means that the AIRLink is powered up and running properly.
PWR green LED is solid meaning that the unit is powered up properly
- Connect to AIRLink WiFi Check available WiFi networks on your computer or tablet and connect to AIRLink network to set up the initial WiFi connection of the AIRLink. Find AirLinkConfig_XXXXX network and connect to it:
The name of the network is unique for each AIRLink and starts with AirLinkConfig_ and ends with a collection of unrelated symbols.
Default password: airlink1
- Open web browser Once you’re connected to the AIRLink network, open the web browser and proceed with the initial configuration. Click the following link to open .
In case the link above doesn’t work - then go to . In case doesn’t work either - then go to . In some cases you might need to manually type this into browser address network. This is browser-dependent, we recommend to use Google Chrome or Safari.
You will see the following welcome page:
SmartAP AIRLink Dashboard This page displays the generic information about the system including its status, system ID and current software version. You can see the current WiFi network status by clicking WiFi Settings:
By default, AIRLink is configured as the access point. If you would like to connect AIRLink to your home or office WiFi network then click the Connect to another WiFi network button.
- Connect to WiFi You will see the discovered WiFi networks list:
Select the network you would like to connect to and click on its name. You will be asked to enter the WiFi network password:
After you have typed the password please click Connect.
After pressing the button, AIRLink will attempt to connect. This may take a few minutes. AirLinkConfig network will be disabled and most likely your computer will connect to the other known network. However, if you entered the wrong password or the access point rejects the connection for other reasons, turn on the AirLinkConfig access point again. Your computer is unlikely to automatically connect to it and you may have to do this manually.
After pressing the button, the device will be expected to appear at the address , if it is supported by your router / computer, and will automatically redirect there.
Connect your computer to the same WiFi network which you have just connected the AIRLink to and go to . If you are able to see the main dashboard - you have successfully connected AIRLink to WiFi network:
If you have troubles accessing AIRLink dashboard - please view .
CONGRATULATIONS! Now your AIRLink is connected to Internet.
- Claim AIRLink ownership By default, your AIRLink is owned by the manufacturer (Sky-Drones) or other licensed manufacturer. You can claim ownership of the AIRLink and assign it to your account.
AIRLink ownership is required to use Sky-Drones Cloud services. Therefore, we highly recommend to claim your AIRLink ownership at this step. Make sure you have the following:
- Sky-Drones Cloud account. If not - create .
- AIRLink is connected to WiFi and has internet access.
Go to the AIRLink dashboard at and scroll down until you see Ownership Transfer section, click Claim Ownership:
Enter your Sky-Drones Cloud email and password to authenticate. Click Authenticate:
If the authentication was successful you will see the following message confirming that your identity was successfully verified.
If you have any troubles at this step - make sure you have your and your email and password are correct. Click Claim Ownership of this AIRLink. If successful – you should see the following confirmation message:
You can click the button to return to the main dashboard.
CONGRATULATIONS! Your AIRLink has been successfully set up and now you can proceed to its configuration for your vehicle. We recommend to use SmartAP GCS for the initial vehicle configuration setup. Later you can use Sky-Drones Cloud web services for real time flight monitoring and control. Your AIRLink is already available in your Sky-Drones Cloud account.
Connect via SmartAP GCS
- Open SmartAP GCS app Open application and set up the new connection.
- Add new connection Click the WiFi icon in the top right corner to set up the new connection. You should enter the same IP address as you discovered in the previous steps during the initial power up. The port name is 14555. Click open.
You should see the telemetry updates and hear the voice notification that indicated the connection was successfully established.
- Open autopilot configuration settings Click on the Gear icon on the top toolbar to open the settings for the autopilot configuration.
Please refer to your specific drone configuration steps for more detailed information.
- Set up video streaming Click on the Gear icon in the bottom left corner and set up the video source. Select RTSP video source and type the RTSP address. In our case, this is rtsp://192.168.1.157:8554/camera/0
Click Start and then you should be able to see the real time video feed:
The following wiki, pages and posts are tagged with
Title | Type | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
gcs and cloud | post | Mon, Jan 31, 22, sample4 from sass2 product sample4 |
overview and initial powerup | post | Mon, Jan 31, 22, sample1.md of sass2 product2_sample files The most advanced hardware and software ecosystem for enterprise drones |
smartAP | post | Mon, Jan 31, 22, sample5 from sass2 product2 sample5 |
smartAPLink and faq | post | Mon, Jan 31, 22, sample3 from sass2 product2 sample3 |
telemetry and advanced software | post | Mon, Jan 31, 22, sample2.md of sass2 product2 sample2 file |
px4 docker image for jvsim simulation | post | 목, 2월 10, 22, docker image implmentation for docker px4 simuation |
qtcreator wiki from drone guide dev-setup | post | 화, 2월 15, 22, planning phase research for dashboard elements using |
offboard control using pixhawk raspi mavros | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, hitl setup and configuraiton using pixhawk raspi mavros and px4 |
setup gazebo for simulation | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, pixhawk ros gazebo gcs simulation |
setup mavros and px4 | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, setup mavros and px4 |
testing sitl drone | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, process to launch sitl drone |
ros and px4 architecture and data flow | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, examine how data flows for user interface and drone control |
setup ros indigo with tutlesim | post | Wed, Feb 16, 22, pixhawk gcs simulation series 2 with ros indigo |
connecting raspi to matek f406 wing | post | Fri, Feb 18, 22, hardware setup with raspi 4 with matek f406 wing |
px4 simulation for gazebo | post | Fri, Feb 18, 22, simulation instruciton from px4 |
Let's roll and conquer! | post | Monday, Third week with jdlab and first week probably for actual work |
brainstorming session prior to setting out on gcs development | post | Mon, Feb 21, 22, pool resources and ideas into one single gcs you can develop |
overview of epp and eps for airframes | post | Tue, Feb 22, 22, research before business call to manufactueres |
connecting rpi to gcs with the use of uavmatrix on uavcast pro | post | Mon, Feb 28, 22, supported raspi board pinout maps and setup guide |
creating custom mission points for fixed wings | post | Fri, Mar 18, 22, p-turn or turnaround insertion to the mission raw data for exit and entry for p-turnaround and side/front-lap coverage creation that willmod... |
gStreamer vs qtAv | post | Wed, Mar 30, 22, qt movie qmovie phonon video player |
realtime georeferencing plus imu overlay | post | Tue, Apr 05, 22, how to add vehicle status sensor data to georeferencing |
rtk reach m2 receiver documentation | post | Wed, Apr 06, 22, rtk reach receiver wifi 5g lte |
avionics on airfoil and frames | post | Thu, Apr 07, 22, airfoil materials, designs and innovations in the avionics |
using openTX on radiomaster TX16s | post | Sun, Apr 10, 22, rc reciever transmitter opentx radiomaster configuration simulation |
adding GPS and IMU data to photos post flight | post | Mon, Apr 11, 22, perform post processing of gps/imu data or develop camera firmware lib to infuse IMU from fc to exif metadata |
BMU BMC BMS battery management | post | Thu, Apr 14, 22, to check the usage and health of batteries at all phases of flight cycle |
viewpro custom pwm | post | Thu, Apr 14, 22, customize viewpro camera and gimball with mavlink |
raspberrypi video streaming | post | Fri, Apr 22, 22, configure and setup raspi to enable streaming on mavlink and to advance to LTE transmission |
lx network, airlink, gcs and data transmission on smart radio, rf mesh and quantum encryption | post | Tue, Apr 26, 22, all about setup and how it operates and managed |