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Any thoughts on hand catching the Mini 5 Pro?

AntoineD

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I've been practising hand launching and catching my Mini 5 Pro because there are so many times there isn't a suitable surface to fly from. I'm pretty confident about launching, but landing really worries me - I tried it twice with success, but the third time I just let it fly back up because I was afraid I'd damage it, or my hand.

The way they always show you in the videos is to let it settle down on your hand, but I don't think I'll ever be confident enough to adopt this method - those three tries convinced me of that. I notice that in the videos, there's not the slightest breath of wind, so the drone just settles down on the person's hand perfectly, but even with a slight breeze, I notice it pitches around quite a bit when it's preparing to land, and I can't imagine I'll ever be sure it won't slide off my hand and damage itself.

When I had a Phantom 3, it was easy - just put it a little above head height, grab one of those chunky legs firmly then power off the motors.

So I'm wondering if it's possible to do something similar with the Mini 5 Pro? Grab the body and then power off the motors? I notice that there's a control labelled 'vision positioning and obstacle sensing' - if you switch that off, does it disable the downward facing sensors so you can grab the body without the drone thinking it's seeing the ground and then jumping away from your hand? If so, has anyone tried this method of hand catching? I'd love to know, because frankly, I don't think this 'let it settle on your hand' method it really safe.
 
I'll ever be sure it won't slide off my hand and damage itself.
Just close your thumb and fingers around the drone as it settles and hold it steady until the motors have stopped.

So I'm wondering if it's possible to do something similar with the Mini 5 Pro? Grab the body and then power off the motors? I notice that there's a control labelled 'vision positioning and obstacle sensing' - if you switch that off, does it disable the downward facing sensors so you can grab the body without the drone thinking it's seeing the ground and then jumping away from your hand? If so, has anyone tried this method of hand catching? I'd love to know, because frankly, I don't think this 'let it settle on your hand' method it really safe.

Hand landing a drone is like seduction. Gentle, patient, and subtle is always better that abrupt grabbing.

If you hold your hand still, the drone will settle easily onto it, with the sensors identifying your hand as a stable plane to land on, like the ground. It is possible to snatch the drone out of the air, but it will immediately power up the motors and put up a fuss. Another option is to grab it and immediately invert it so that the motors automatically switch off.

If you're landing the drone gently on your hand and something isn't quite right, the drone will either hover or ascend and you can try again. If something goes wrong while snatching the drone out of the air there are some very unpleasant consequences.

Consider getting using a kevlar kitchen glove while hand landing, one of the lighter weight ones intended for protection from knife cuts.
 
Always land tail towards you, that means that stick movements can be instinctive and gives you the area around the battery to grasp gently but firmly. If there is a breeze stand with your back to it and use yourself as a windbreak. Try to land side on to a breeze and the drone will bounce around.
 
I've never seen a place where I couldn't launch from or land on, unless you are standing in sand or tall grass. I have seen quite a few cut fingers on this forum though, be careful.
 
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Grasping and inverting the drone once it’s landed in your hand puts unnecessary strain on the drones systems and gives you the opportunity to mess up as the drone will oppose this movement. When the drone lands in your hand just keep the left stick all the way down and the motors will just stop.
 
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I've been practising hand launching and catching my Mini 5 Pro because there are so many times there isn't a suitable surface to fly from. I'm pretty confident about launching, but landing really worries me - I tried it twice with success, but the third time I just let it fly back up because I was afraid I'd damage it, or my hand.

The way they always show you in the videos is to let it settle down on your hand, but I don't think I'll ever be confident enough to adopt this method - those three tries convinced me of that. I notice that in the videos, there's not the slightest breath of wind, so the drone just settles down on the person's hand perfectly, but even with a slight breeze, I notice it pitches around quite a bit when it's preparing to land, and I can't imagine I'll ever be sure it won't slide off my hand and damage itself.

When I had a Phantom 3, it was easy - just put it a little above head height, grab one of those chunky legs firmly then power off the motors.

So I'm wondering if it's possible to do something similar with the Mini 5 Pro? Grab the body and then power off the motors? I notice that there's a control labelled 'vision positioning and obstacle sensing' - if you switch that off, does it disable the downward facing sensors so you can grab the body without the drone thinking it's seeing the ground and then jumping away from your hand? If so, has anyone tried this method of hand catching? I'd love to know, because frankly, I don't think this 'let it settle on your hand' method it really safe.
I grab mine with my thumb and two fingers works fine more stable.
 
Use drone-hacks Windows app to disable smart landing. Drone will not jump up when you put your hand below to grab it.
You can put it in sport mode when it is ready to land in your hand. It turns off avoidance and will land safely in your hand. Just remember to put it back in normal mode before launching it again.
 
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You can put it in sport mode when it is ready to land in your hand. It turns off avoidance and will land safely in your hand. Just remember to put it back in normal mode before launching it again.
Actually, even if set to Sport, it will boot up in Normal mode next time as a safety feature. To use Sport again, you have to switch to Normal and then back to Sport.
 
You can put it in sport mode when it is ready to land in your hand. It turns off avoidance and will land safely in your hand. Just remember to put it back in normal mode before launching it again.
Sport mode only turns off horizontal sensors. The bottom sensor is still active and will cause it to gain altitude if approached from the bottom while in hover. You can turn off all sensors in the menu and would be safer than sport mode.
 
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When you turn on sport mode with the drone hovering you can put your hand under it and touch it and the motors will turn off with it in your hand. It does not gain altitude, I do that all the time on if I am on lose dirt or sand.
You cannot unless you have down input on left stick. From a hover (no stick input) the M5P will gain altitude when your hand is underneath at about 8". Sport mode does not disable the bottom sensor and has more risk if you bump the right stick. I do the hand catch in normal or cinema mode with OA disabled in menu (includes bottom sensor) when on my boat. Sport mode doesn't help.
 
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You cannot unless you have down input on left stick. From a hover (no stick input) the M5P will gain altitude when your hand is underneath at about 8". Sport mode does not disable the bottom sensor and has more risk if you bump the right stick. I do the hand catch in normal or cinema mode with OA disabled in menu (includes bottom sensor) when on my boat. Sport mode doesn't help.
when I try landing my mini 5 pro on my hand it doesn't work it just flys straight up to get out of the way. I don't want to push the left stick down same time as putting hand out because remote will be here to use while b in one hand and getting to land a drone in the other.
 
when I try landing my mini 5 pro on my hand it doesn't work it just flys straight up to get out of the way. I don't want to push the left stick down same time as putting hand out because remote will be here to use while b in one hand and getting to land a drone in the other.
You can't make the drone land without holding your hand still and pulling back on the left stick. If the drone is hovering and you extend your hand beneath it, it senses your hand as an obstacle and climbs.

The DJI Neo and Neo 2 will actually do what you've been attempting. They're programmed to land on your outstretched, palm-up hand.

It's might be easier for you to do hand landings if you have a neck strap on the controller.
 
Sport mode only turns off horizontal sensors. The bottom sensor is still active and will cause it to gain altitude if approached from the bottom while in hover. You can turn off all sensors in the menu and would be safer than sport mode.
Try hovering at approx. 5' and then pinching the battery clips from behind... then left stick full down for 3 seconds. That way your hand is never anywhere near the downward sensor. Works every time with me.
 
Try hovering at approx. 5' and then pinching the battery clips from behind... then left stick full down for 3 seconds. That way your hand is never anywhere near the downward sensor. Works every time with me.
To be abundantly clear, you are merely grabbing the drone from behind by the outside of the clips, rather than pinching the clips to release the battery.
 

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