I know, I just need to take a quick picture, I will take off at 4250 mtYou don't have any blocks there besides the pure physics... at that altitude above sea level the air is thinner so the motors need to spin faster to make up for the less thrust generated per rev. This mean in practice that your drone might be prone to lose height, be more wobbly, have a harder time to hold horizontal position & be more affected by winds and the risk is higher that it can be blown away.
That should be no problem. Climbers have taken off the Mavic 3 from the top of Mt. Everest, 8849 meters. And lots of people fly drones in Tibet at 4000+ meters.I know, I just need to take a quick picture, I will take off at 4250 mt
4000 m is what DJI calls the max service ceiling, meaning they will not guarantee that the drone will behave normally above that height. There is no "block".I know maximum flight altitude is 4000 mt, someone know if is possible to flight at this altitude or there's a software/firmware block?
Then could have said that in the previous commentMy only point is that all aircraft have a max ceiling height, after that the air is too thin to provide enough lift, obviously it's different for every aircraft.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.