olli

it´s possible for thermopiles to fly in snow ?

hello,

one question from newbie about the IR-sensors...

it is possible to fly in winter with snow ? i mean snow on the ground and blue sky ...

or have the thermopile sensors a problem with the cold ground ?



cu olli

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Yes, that's usually fine. All they need is a temp difference between ground and sky. Nightime, winter, doesn't matter.
But the snow does...
Chris, the snow matters.
It is sticky and covers any of the thermopiles it hits.
A single hit and it is a few to 45 degrees off.
Same as rain.
Some thermopile autopilot manuals even warn against the rain,
but the maker hasn't seen the snowfall at his location, what is normal.
He asked about snow on the ground and blue sky. I assume that means not during the actual snowfall, which means it should be fine.
yes i now.snowFALL and rain make issues......


i mean not snowFALL i mean a sunny day.goot waether.but ON GROUND 30cm snow .....

then is the ground cold also....

olli
The sky reads as something like -40 celsuis in IR, so unless you're flying in the antarctic, it's unlikely that a little snow on the ground will confuse the thermopiles. Even with snow, the earth radiates heat from the sun that the thermopiles can 'see'.
ok, i understand....


thanks for info



olli

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