ankyda said:
What I don't understand is how this may apply (if it does at all) to a quadcopter with no fixed wing.
Here's how it applies.
Let's say you had a quadcopter you could actually pilot yourself. Each of the four propellers would rotate at exactly the RPM you set for them. You then take off and tried to enter some sort of stable flight - perhaps a simple hover or perhaps moving at a constant altitude at 5KPH.
If the quadcopter was "inherently stable", you would be able to maintain that stable flight without touching the controls. But the real test is what happens when you do, momentarily, touch the controls. Does it eventually go back to stable flight without further control adjustments or not? That is the criterion that can be applied to any flying device.
In the case of a quadcopter, it would fail miserably. If it started in a hover and one of the props generated a bit more lift for just a second, the quadcopter would begin to tilt and there would be nothing to stop it from continuing. It would soon invert and do a power dive into the ground.
ankyda said:
I guess what I'm looking for is some form of stability criterion equations for a quadcopter that shows me why it becomes unstable openloop.
I think you understand that "unstable open loop" is basically the same as "inherently unstable".
Of course, there is no particular "pitch" or "roll" axis on quadcopter, but in the previous example we can arbitrarily call the problem axis of rotation "roll". If we mathematically model the quadcopter, we would see that the change in roll rate would be a function of the difference in thrust between two diagonally opposite props plus a bit of drag that would eventually slow a roll. But for inherent roll stability we would want to see something that would tend to make the copter level off - some additional factor affecting the change in the roll rate tied to the roll orientation. If there was something in the copter that caused the alignment of the center of thrust to move to the downward side of the center gravity as the copter began to roll, that would do it. You might be able to design a quad copter that way - such a mechanism does quickly come to mind.
BTW: In the case of an airplane, roll stability is created with a dihedral angle between the wings. Airplanes designed specifically for aerobatics do not have this angle and are not roll stable - or in some cases are only very mildly roll stable.
Hope this helps.