joplin-mdbooks-website/content/ardupilot/tuning-the-tecs.md
Stavros Korokithakis c4d1797211
Updates
2021-10-30 23:46:46 +03:00

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+++ title = "Tuning the TECS" weight = 9 sort_by = "weight" insert_anchor_links = "right" +++

To tune the TECS, a helpful resource is the official TECS tuning guide. Make sure you have run an autotune beforehand, and continue with the tuning below.

In tuning, there are three stages:

  • Prepare to measure
  • Take measurements in the field.
  • Set parameters on the bench, based on your measurements.

Preparation

  • Set LIM_PITCH_MAX=4500 (centidegrees), or something similarly high. This is the maximum pitch you'll be achieving in FBWA, and you don't want to be limited by this while trying to tune.
  • Set LIM_PITCH_MIN=-4500 (centidegrees) or something similarly low. This is the minimum pitch you'll be achieving in FBWA, and you don't want to be limited by this either.
  • Set THR_PASS_STAB=1 to avoid mapping your throttle to a curve in some modes. This is important because you want a raw (non-remapped) throttle value when measuring.

In the field

You should perform the measurements in four stages, all in the FBWA mode:

Fly straight

Fly straight and note down:

  • The maximum speed you want to be flying at (in km/h).
  • The throttle percentage at that maximum speed.
  • Start a turn at the maximum bank angle (full roll deflection to one side) and note the slowest speed you can fly at without stalling.
  • Fly straight at a speed 15% higher than the stall speed from the previous step, and note that speed. This is your trim speed.
  • Note the throttle percentage at that speed.
  • Turn throttle to 0 and pitch down a bit so you don't stall. Note the minimum amount of down-pitch required to keep you from stalling (this should only be in the 1-3 degree ballpark).

Fly up

Set the throttle to the maximum throttle percentage from the previous step and start slowly pitching up until your airspeed equals your trim speed from the previous step. If you're higher than that speed and need to climb more, change LIM_PITCH_MAX to something higher and try again. Note down:

  • The pitch angle (in degrees).
  • The vertical speed from the variometer (in m/s).

Fly down

Set the throttle to 0 and start pitching down until your airspeed equals your trim speed from the previous step. Note down:

  • The vertical speed from the variometer (in m/s).

Fly down more

Keep the throttle at 0 and pitch down until you reach your desired maximum speed from step 1. If you're lower than that speed and need to pitch down more, change LIM_PITCH_MIN to something lower and try again. Note down:

  • The pitch angle (in degrees).
  • The vertical speed from the variometer (in m/s).

You're done with this step.

On the bench

After you have the above measurements, you're ready to tune things. You can use the automatic calculator:

TECS tuning calculator

Otherwise, you can do things manually, following the steps below, but you should really use the calculator instead.

For the level flight measurements:

  • Set ARSPD_FBW_MAX (m/s) to something a bit less than the maximum airspeed you achieved in level flight.
  • Set THR_MAX (percentage) to the throttle percentage at max speed.
  • Set ARSPD_FBW_MIN (m/s) to the slowest speed you could turn at without stalling (maybe go a bit higher for some margin).
  • Set TRIM_ARSPD_CM (cm/s) to your trim speed.
  • Set TRIM_THROTTLE (percentage) to your trim throttle percentage.
  • Set STAB_PITCH_DOWN (degrees) to the pitch angle that keeps you from stalling.

For the ascent measurements:

  • Set TECS_PITCH_MAX (degrees) to the pitch angle you measured.
  • Set TECS_CLMB_MAX and FBWB_CLIMB_RATE (both in m/s) to the climb rate you measured.

For the descent measurements:

  • Set TECS_SINK_MIN (m/s) to the descent rate you measured.

For the max descent measurements:

  • Set TECS_PITCH_MIN (degrees) to the pitch angle you measured.
  • Set TECS_SINK_MAX (m/s) to the descent rate you measured.

That's it!


Last updated on October 29, 2021. For any questions/feedback, email me at hi@stavros.io.