- Joined
- Jul 16, 2020
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 7
- Age
- 53
Hi all
New to the forum. I’m an EVO I owner, based in Johannesburg, South Africa.
I’ve asked this question on Autel’s website, and on Autel’s YouTube channel, but received no response (quite disappointing, to be honest). Maybe it’s been asked before on the forum in a different manner but I could not find it in a search.
Regarding overlap settings, surely the higher the altitude, the greater the overlap (factoring in camera angle and some basic trigonometry). My thinking is that the higher the altitude, the bigger the piece of land covered by the photo (assuming my gimbal is pointed directly downward). Or is there something I’m not considering?
Anyway, I notice that when setting up, for example, a polygon mission, when I change the altitude, the distance between the opposing legs of the flight does not change in the way I currently think it should.
Ive just started learning to use WebODM and have been getting good results but would like to be able to plan my flights more efficiently by only taking the amount of photos I really need to take.
I’ve made a spreadsheet to assist with calculating the required distance between the opposing legs of my missions to achieve both 65% and 85% overlap, and it seems to be giving me the right values to use, but then I still have to kind of ‘eyeball’ it on google maps (by measuring out the required distance on the map) then adjusting overlap in Autel Explorer until the distance between the opposing legs of the mission looks about the same as the distance I measured on google maps, based on my altitude and the overlap distance I calculated in my spreadsheet.
Anyway, it would really be nice if Autel Explorer Mission Planner could be of more assistance in automating this process. Does anyone know if the overlap setting in Autel Explorer Mission Planner is based on an assumed altitude? And if so, what is that altitude?
Thanks for any feedback.
Bob Coughlan
New to the forum. I’m an EVO I owner, based in Johannesburg, South Africa.
I’ve asked this question on Autel’s website, and on Autel’s YouTube channel, but received no response (quite disappointing, to be honest). Maybe it’s been asked before on the forum in a different manner but I could not find it in a search.
Regarding overlap settings, surely the higher the altitude, the greater the overlap (factoring in camera angle and some basic trigonometry). My thinking is that the higher the altitude, the bigger the piece of land covered by the photo (assuming my gimbal is pointed directly downward). Or is there something I’m not considering?
Anyway, I notice that when setting up, for example, a polygon mission, when I change the altitude, the distance between the opposing legs of the flight does not change in the way I currently think it should.
Ive just started learning to use WebODM and have been getting good results but would like to be able to plan my flights more efficiently by only taking the amount of photos I really need to take.
I’ve made a spreadsheet to assist with calculating the required distance between the opposing legs of my missions to achieve both 65% and 85% overlap, and it seems to be giving me the right values to use, but then I still have to kind of ‘eyeball’ it on google maps (by measuring out the required distance on the map) then adjusting overlap in Autel Explorer until the distance between the opposing legs of the mission looks about the same as the distance I measured on google maps, based on my altitude and the overlap distance I calculated in my spreadsheet.
Anyway, it would really be nice if Autel Explorer Mission Planner could be of more assistance in automating this process. Does anyone know if the overlap setting in Autel Explorer Mission Planner is based on an assumed altitude? And if so, what is that altitude?
Thanks for any feedback.
Bob Coughlan