It seems that gyroscopes should be studied more.
Pro flat earth gyro video
I don't quite know this guy's point.
I'll answer these in detail later, but aircraft AI gyros do NOT do "prove flat earth"! All they do is give a short term (10 minute or so vertical reference). They have a built in mechanism to gradually reset themselves to this.
One the other hand, just look up how marine Gyro-compasses work. These rely on the rotating earth to set themselves to true north and not magnetic north.
But, unless you like lots of egg on you face, don't try pushing gyros as "proof of flat earth". Small mechanical gyros (as in aircraft) simply do not have the long term stability to do this.
It seems if you had one running on your table for an hour it would show the earths' movement of 15degrees. Why wouldn't it?
Yes, it most certainly would! But (there's always one of those - in legal documents we call them "fine print") , no low cost gyroscope has the stability to manage this.
Here is a fairly down-to-earth document on practical gyroscopes https://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/UCAM-CL-TR-696.pdf&ved=0ahUKEwiavsfq5PHKAhWDg6YKHYjaAOQQFggkMAI&usg=AFQjCNElXyqvtDKP97LL1sKVKlA-yLEmGQ (https://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/UCAM-CL-TR-696.pdf&ved=0ahUKEwiavsfq5PHKAhWDg6YKHYjaAOQQFggkMAI&usg=AFQjCNElXyqvtDKP97LL1sKVKlA-yLEmGQ) Sorry about the massive link.
The earth rotates at only (about) 15°/hr and low cost gyros have much more drift than that. Low drift ones are available, but!
Commercially Available Mechanical Gyroscopes
Numerous mechanical gyroscopes are available on the market. Typically, these precision machined
gyros can cost between $10,000 and $100,000. Lower cost mechanical gyros are usually of lesser
quality in terms of drift rate and accuracy.
There are much lower cost ones for model helicopters, etc, but their stability is far lower than needed.
Futaba Model Helicopter Gyro
The Futaba FP-G154 [FUTABA] is a low-cost low-accuracy mechanical rate gyrogyro designed for use in radio-controlled model helicopters and model airplanes. The Futuna FP-G154 costs less than $150 and is available at hobby stores,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
However, sensitivity and accuracy are orders of magnitude lower than “professional” mechanical gyroscopes. The drift of radio-control type gyroscopes is on the order of tens of degrees per minute.
There are various solid-state gyros and ring laser gyros, but nothing low in cost with adequate stability that I know of, but I'm no gyro expert! I'd love to here if there was!
I'll leave aircraft Al's to another post, but they do not use large gyros with sufficient long term stability either.
Of course, when you start talking about military grade inertial navigation systems you will get the stability, but cost - don't ask!
You're going to need some better kit. The MPU9250 is just barely good enough for your mobile phone to figure out if it's horizontal or vertical.
Given up on the Gyroscope idea - scared it might prove that we live on a rotating globe?
You're going to need some better kit. The MPU9250 is just barely good enough for your mobile phone to figure out if it's horizontal or vertical.
Given up on the Gyroscope idea - scared it might prove that we live on a rotating globe?
No, I'm just having trouble buying the gyroscopes that I want.
If you really want a gyroscope to do the job, here is one! Mind you if you don't have a Bill Gates budget, forget it!
https://aerospace.honeywell.com/en/products/navigation-and-sensors/gg1320an-digital-ring-laser-gyroscope (https://aerospace.honeywell.com/en/products/navigation-and-sensors/gg1320an-digital-ring-laser-gyroscope)
(https://aerospace.honeywell.com/~/media/aerospace/images/sensors/ring-laser-gyro_625x460.jpg)
This one has a "drift" that would do very well: Angular Random Walk (ARW) 0.0035 deg/hour (typical).
Angular Random Walk means that in the absence of any movement, after an hour it will typically show 0.0035°.
Don't worry I really think this is a bit up-market!
But, the point is that there are ring laser gyroscopes that far more stable than needed to measure the Earth's rotation.