I finally made the upgrade from my beloved Air 2 to my new Air 2S and I love it, the Air 2 was always my favorite but Life happens and I was regrettably forced to part with mine but in a happy change of fate I had a friend who had a spare Air 2S with a pro control controller who was not using it found out about my unfortunate recent luck and in an act of generosity, gave his barely used (in the year he owned it he took it on one flight) Air 2S and Pro controller and gave it to me!
It's rare that something good like this happens to me these days but I digress, something I've noticed with my Air 2 and now my Air 2S that seems to be unique to the line, in that I havent noticed thus far any of my other drones this happens to (Air 3, Air 3S, Mini 2, Mini 2SE) is that whenever I'm flying around with my Air 2 line, I always seem to get lots of attention from hummingbirds, they always seem very curious about it, and fly up to it almost seeming to say hello. I even had one stop in front of the drone, look at me as if to ask for permission to approach, and then look back at the drone and got closer. The first thing that popped into my mind is the RPMs of the blades, are they similar to that of a hummingbird wing flaps per minute? Do they think it's family? I'm curious to see if this happens to anyone else. I fly all over Southern California and it is happened in San Diego, Los Angeles, Palm springs, riverside, and even Colorado.
Let me know what you think in the comments below below
It's rare that something good like this happens to me these days but I digress, something I've noticed with my Air 2 and now my Air 2S that seems to be unique to the line, in that I havent noticed thus far any of my other drones this happens to (Air 3, Air 3S, Mini 2, Mini 2SE) is that whenever I'm flying around with my Air 2 line, I always seem to get lots of attention from hummingbirds, they always seem very curious about it, and fly up to it almost seeming to say hello. I even had one stop in front of the drone, look at me as if to ask for permission to approach, and then look back at the drone and got closer. The first thing that popped into my mind is the RPMs of the blades, are they similar to that of a hummingbird wing flaps per minute? Do they think it's family? I'm curious to see if this happens to anyone else. I fly all over Southern California and it is happened in San Diego, Los Angeles, Palm springs, riverside, and even Colorado.
Let me know what you think in the comments below below