So it’s day 2 with the new bebop 2.
I’ve had a couple “crashes”, but all pretty mild and no higher than 6 feet. Usually get a little too close and clip something hard enough for the software to kill the engines.
Today I started paying more attention to the video.
Yecch!
Grainy, blurry, etc. Definitely not what I would expect from a 1080p sensor. I’ve got a couple Contour HD 1080p sports cams and the quality difference between those and the bebop are night and day. A car can go by at highway speed and I can read the license plate on it with the contour, i can barely make out my dog in my backyard on the bebop at 20 feet alt..
So, it either got “bumped” somehow or it was crap to start with.
So I open up the lenses. That epoxy is rock hard and I end up (essentially) sawing it off. Hard to belive a bump knocked it out of focus, my money is on that it was crap focused when assmbled.
Once apart, a good air dust and lens cleaning is in order.
How to get that lens back in is a different story. I’ve seen tape, teflon and all manner or glues in various videos. I tried the tape and it was just miserable and nearly impossible to focus. Even if I could get it focused, it would shift as soon as I took my hand of it or it would slowly drift out of focus as the tape/glue shifted around under torque/pressure.
Tried to find a nut (plastic) that would fit the threads on the barrel but no joy.
Then I noticed and old cb antenna cap lying on my bench. I snip a piece off and it’s just right to slip over the threaded portion of the lens barrel. It’s a good tight push fit down the sensor housing.
Once it’s all together, I find that the lens barrel is good and solid, but I can screw it in and out enough to focus. The cb cap is a harder type of silicone/rubber and apparently it is hard enough to grab the sensor housing and refuse to spin, but just pliable enough for the lens barrel threads to imprint on it and allow me to adjust the focus.
Tomorrow, I’ll take it out in the backyard and see how it works. If it’s good, I’ll put a dab of hot glue to keep it at the focus point. But should it come out of focus again, it will be a simple matter to peel off the glue and readjust.
Now, lets have a look at the sensor and see if they skipped the heat paste or not....

I’ve had a couple “crashes”, but all pretty mild and no higher than 6 feet. Usually get a little too close and clip something hard enough for the software to kill the engines.
Today I started paying more attention to the video.
Yecch!
Grainy, blurry, etc. Definitely not what I would expect from a 1080p sensor. I’ve got a couple Contour HD 1080p sports cams and the quality difference between those and the bebop are night and day. A car can go by at highway speed and I can read the license plate on it with the contour, i can barely make out my dog in my backyard on the bebop at 20 feet alt..
So, it either got “bumped” somehow or it was crap to start with.
So I open up the lenses. That epoxy is rock hard and I end up (essentially) sawing it off. Hard to belive a bump knocked it out of focus, my money is on that it was crap focused when assmbled.
Once apart, a good air dust and lens cleaning is in order.
How to get that lens back in is a different story. I’ve seen tape, teflon and all manner or glues in various videos. I tried the tape and it was just miserable and nearly impossible to focus. Even if I could get it focused, it would shift as soon as I took my hand of it or it would slowly drift out of focus as the tape/glue shifted around under torque/pressure.
Tried to find a nut (plastic) that would fit the threads on the barrel but no joy.
Then I noticed and old cb antenna cap lying on my bench. I snip a piece off and it’s just right to slip over the threaded portion of the lens barrel. It’s a good tight push fit down the sensor housing.
Once it’s all together, I find that the lens barrel is good and solid, but I can screw it in and out enough to focus. The cb cap is a harder type of silicone/rubber and apparently it is hard enough to grab the sensor housing and refuse to spin, but just pliable enough for the lens barrel threads to imprint on it and allow me to adjust the focus.
Tomorrow, I’ll take it out in the backyard and see how it works. If it’s good, I’ll put a dab of hot glue to keep it at the focus point. But should it come out of focus again, it will be a simple matter to peel off the glue and readjust.
Now, lets have a look at the sensor and see if they skipped the heat paste or not....

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