Hold versus Pan Mode
still very useful, but needs adaption to v0.56; description of parameters Pan Deadband, Pan Limiter, Pan Deadband Hysteresis missing
by Yang/wdaehn, with edits by OlliW
Generally speaking, as regards the gimbal behavior two situations can be distinguished: The camera should remain stable in relationship to the ground (hold mode) or in relationship to the gimbal frame (pan mode). The STorM32 controller allows you choose the mode for each of the three axes independently.
What does stabilization mean?
The term "stabilization" can mean different things depending on the application, and on the axis we talk about.
Imagine you have put your camera on a tripod and are now trying to rotate the camera by 360° for a panorama shot. In pan mode the goal is a stabilization in the sense of removing camera shakes but in overall to follow the turn of tripod. In other words, the yaw axis stabilization acts like a virtual tripod. The other type is called hold mode, meaning no matter what you do, the camera will hold its current position. Here, no matter what direction you point at with the tripod, the camera will compensate this movement and will remain static, i.e. hold its initial position relative to the ground.
The parameters to adjust all this are found in the [Pan] tab in the GUI.
Hold versus Pan
Which mode you want for which axis is defined in the Pan Mode Default Setting parameter.
The standard setting is "hold hold pan" in order to lock the camera in pitch and roll but allow yaw movements. This is, for most situations, the appropriate setting: What should happen if you accidentally tilt the camera forward to the ground? Nothing, i.e., the gimbal should compensate this unwanted movement and keep the horizon in the video at the same level. Same thing with the roll axis. Just because you do not hold the gimbal perfectly level, the horizon should tilt to one side? No, the horizon should be kept level. For yaw movements, however, a different behavior is normally desired. If you would have turned on the hold mode for yaw and would turn the gimbal by 180°, you would film the gimbal frame since the camera would remain stable relative to ground. Doesn't make much sense. Instead the camera should have followed the 180° turn, which is achieved by "pan". So, the "hold hold pan" setting does make sense for most cases.
Now imagine a hand-held gimbal used in the mountains. Since the pitch is set to "hold" as default, you would either film the ground or the mountains on the other side of the valley, but not your target maybe 15° higher. One way to adjust the pitch would be via the joystick, which however would be inconvenient. An alternative is to enable pan on the pitch axis, and use "pan hold pan" for the Pan Mode Default Setting parameter. Then the gimbal would dampen any shakes in the pitch axis but in general you can point the camera up and down by moving the gimbal frame.
A completely different example would be a gimbal mounted in an airplane and to record movies from the pilots point of view. When the plane is pointing downwards the camera should look downwards, when the plane is flying a right turn the horizon should tilt. The only task of the gimbal is to remove shakes and allow the "pilot" to look left/right/up/down. That would ask for a Pan Mode Default Setting of "pan pan pan".
Comment: It is strongly adviced against using a brushless gimbal as FPV camera! The purpose of the example was just to explain things.
Fine Tuning the Pan Mode
The obvious next question would be how the controller differentiates between unwanted shakes versus true movements? In the [Pan] tab the parameters Pitch Pan, Roll Pan and Yaw Pan are found, with which you determine the follow speeds in pan mode for each axis. A zero means that the follow speed is zero, which effectively corresponds to hold mode. A non-zero value enables the pan mode, whereby a larger pan value means a faster following.
Importantly, whether these settings become active or not depends on the Pan Mode Default Setting parameter: If "hold" is specified for an axis there, then this axis will be in hold mode irrespective of the pan speed value. The Pan Mode Default Setting so to say overrides the pan speed setting.
Buttons for Switching Pan/Hold
Sometimes it might be desirable to switch during a shot from pan to hold or vice versa. To enable this, buttons can be connected to the Aux-0, Aux-1, and Aux-2 pins, which allow you to switch through the four preset pan modes specified in the parameters Pan Mode Default Setting to Pan Mode Setting #3.
Let's consider as example these settings:
- Pan Mode Control = "Aux-01 press" (meaning that buttons are connected to Aux-0 and Aux-1)
- Pan Mode Default Setting = "hold hold pan"
- Pan Mode Setting #1 = "hold hold hold"
- Pan Mode Setting #2 = "pan pan pan"
- Pan Mode Setting #3 = "pan hold pan"
If none of the two buttons connected to Aux-0 and Aux-1 are pressed, or switched on, then Pan Mode Default Setting is active, which in our example is "hold hold pan". This means that the pitch and roll axes will be in hold mode, and yaw in pan mode.
If only the button connected to Aux-0 is pressed/switched on, then the Pan Mode Setting #1 becomes active. In our example all three axes are then in hold mode.
If only the button connected to Aux-1 is pressed/switched on, then the Pan Mode Setting #2 is selected and "pan pan pan" would be activated.
Finally, if both buttons connected to Aux-0 and Aux-1 are pressed/switched on, then the Pan Mode Setting #3 is selected or "pan hold pan" in our example.
Instead of buttons, connected to Aux-0 to Aux-2, one of course could choose also any other available input, such as e.g. an PWM input or an PPM input, to switch betwenn the four pan mode settings.
Next step
You have learned now all relevant settings which you need to record great shots in various typical situations. The STorM32-BGC provides however some more possibilities, such as remote camera control or Bluetooth connectivity. Go ahead, explore.