Pixhawk Series

Pixhawk® is an independent open-hardware project providing readily-available, low-cost, and high-end, autopilot hardware designs to the academic, hobby and industrial communities. "Pixhawk-series" boards run PX4 on the NuttX OS.

Manufacturers have created many different boards based on the open designs, with form factors that are optimised for applications from cargo carrying though to first person view (FPV) racers.

For computationally intensive tasks (e.g. computer vision) you will need a separate companion computer (e.g. Raspberry Pi 2/3 Navio2) or a platform with an integrated companion solution (e.g. Intel® Aero Ready to Fly Drone, Qualcomm Snapdragon Flight).

The following products in the series are recommended/regularly tested with PX4:

The rest of this topic explains a bit more about the Pixhawk series, but is not required reading.

Background

The Pixhawk project creates open hardware designs in the form of schematics, which define a set of components (CPU, sensors, etc.) and their connections/pin mappings.

Manufacturers are encouraged to take the open designs and create products that are best suited to a particular market or use case (the physical layout/form factor not part of the open specification). Boards based on the same design are binary compatible.

While a physical connector standard is not mandated, newer products generally follow the Dronecode® Autopilot Connector Standard.

The project also creates reference autopilot boards based on the open designs, and shares them under the same licence.

FMU Versions

The Pixhawk project has created a number of different open designs/schematics. All boards based on a design should be binary compatible (run the same firmware).

Each design is named using the designation: FMUvX (e.g.: FMUv1, FMUv2, FMUv3, FMUv4, etc.). Higher FMU numbers indicate that the board is more recent, but may not indicate increased capability (versions can be almost identical - differing only in connector wiring).

PX4 users generally do not need to know very much about FMU versions:

  • QGroundControl automatically downloads the correct firmware for a connected autopilot (based on its FMU version "under the hood").
  • Choosing a controller is usually based on physical constraints/form factor rather than FMU version.

PX4 developers need to know the FMU version of their board, as this is required to build custom hardware.

At very high level, the main differences are:

Licensing and trademarks

Pixhawk project schematics and reference designs are licensed under CC BY-SA 3.

The license allows you to use, sell, share, modify and build on the files in almost any way you like - provided that you give credit/attribution, and that you share any changes that you make under the same open source license (see the human readable version of the license for a concise summary of the rights and obligations).

Boards that are derived directly from Pixhawk project schematic files (or reference boards) must be open sourced. They can't be commercially licensed as proprietary products.

Manufacturers can create (compatible) fully independent products by first generating fresh schematic files that have the same pin mapping/components as the FMU designs. Products that are based on independently created schematics are considered original works, and can be licensed as required.

Product names/brands can also be trademarked. Trademarked names may not be used without the permission of the owner.

Pixhawk is a trademark, and cannot be used in product names without permission.

Additional Information

LEDs

All Pixhawk-series flight controllers have an RGB LED to indicate the current status of the vehicle. To interpret the LEDs see: LED Meanings.

© PX4 Dev Team. License: CC BY 4.0            Updated: 2018-06-16 09:20:31

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