[NSRCA-discussion] curious
Vicente "Vince" Bortone
vicenterc at comcast.net
Mon Mar 22 19:38:56 AKDT 2010
Well is not only our dampening, it is the control system dampening. That is one reason is not necesarily good to use different brands to build one system. Because it works it does not mean that it going to work well. I think looking only the latency is not good enough to evaluate the system.
Vicente "Vince" Bortone
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jay Marshall" <lightfoot at sc.rr.com>
To: "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 2:54:57 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] curious
Vince, now you are really going to mess their minds up! In addition, at my age, all natural responses are heavily dampened! lol
Jay Marshall
-----Original Message-----
From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org [mailto:nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org] On Behalf Of Vicente "Vince" Bortone
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 1:58 PM
To: General pattern discussion
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] curious
This is very good point. There is another important factor that I am going to try to explain. Someone expert in controls can help us here. I think that is called natural frequency of the control system. If the the human natural frequency is close to the TX/RX combo that will be a huge problem since the control system won't be stable. In other worlds if the TX/RX latency is very small but the natural frequencies are close to each other it could be very bad results. Well, I think this is very difficult to measure but I think this additional factor should be of consideration.
Vicente "Vince" Bortone
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill's Email" <wemodels at cox.net>
To: "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 10:07:47 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] curious
I think it's amusing that a year or so ago nobody had ever even heard of
latency. Now it is THE NUMBER ONE technical specification to consider.
Keep in mind that radio latency is one to two orders of magnitude less
than the "human" latency (reaction time) that we must all deal with.
That runs about 215 milliseconds on average.
Test yours: http://www.humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime/index.php
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