If it’s in your carry on I don’t see what baggage handlers would be touching your bag? You mean like at the hotel and the limo/cab drivers? Usually TSA doesn’t touch carry on unless there’s a problem.Is it better to travel with my Mini 2 batteries in the hub or stored separately in the same Harbor Freight apache case? I am trying to save space but also keep my drone and its contents protected from the baggage handlers in my carry on.
Thanks,
Tommy
There is no need to have the batteries at 30-50%.Just make sure that the percentage in all the batteries is 30-50% but not more, for safety they need to be in "storage voltage".
The batteries we use on our drones are LiPo batteries which need proper care. When you go on a plane the pressure changes, and it is stressful for the battery. If the battery is at storage voltage it helps because the charge inside can fluctuate freely, but when it's fully charged it might become unstable and dangerous.There is no need to have the batteries at 30-50%.
No airline or air safety authority sugest that and no-one at the airport will check it either.
If it was important, they would also want all iPads, laptops, mobile phones to also be at 30-50% ... but they don't.
This is a myth perpetuated in drone forums.The batteries we use on our drones are LiPo batteries which need proper care. When you go on a plane the pressure changes, and it is stressful for the battery. If the battery is at storage voltage it helps because the charge inside can fluctuate freely, but when it's fully charged it might become unstable and dangerous.
LiIon batteries you use on your phones and tablets aren't the same, they can't provide such huge currents, instead, they provide more capacity. These batteries aren't that dangerous to transport while charged.
DJI manuals have contributed to a number of myths, including this one.While airlines would not check for this, it is still good practice to do it, even in the manual of the drone it says to "Discharge the battery to 30% for transportation, this can be done by flying the aircraft outdoors" or something similar.
Read the extra section that I added above.You can do whatever you want with your batteries, but for me: better safe than sorry!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.