there appears to be some slight damage to the left rear props ,the ones on the left in the photo and also you could be getting a compass error if there is rebar in those slabsHello experts,
I’m a first time user of a drone, and something isn’t right. I think I know what it is, but would like my thoughts to be corroborated.
cheers
Peter
View attachment 97222
When I attempted my first and subsequent flights, the drone powered up nicely but after a few seconds powered down, and never took off despite what seemed full power.what do you think is wrong
there appears to be some slight damage to the left rear props ,the ones on the left in the photo and also you could be getting a compass error if there is rebar in those slabsHello experts,
I’m a first time user of a drone, and something isn’t right. I think I know what it is, but would like my thoughts to be corroborated.
cheers
Peter
View attachment 97222
did you remove all the props at once that would do it, with the drone camera facing you, the front right arm motor should have a single stripe prop ,the left rear prop has a single stripe prop, the front left and rear right have the two stripe propsTwo of the props have an extra stripe
there appears to be some slight damage to the left rear props ,the ones on the left in the photo and also you could be getting a compass error if there is rebar in those slabs
just sitting there for the photo, I calibrated it outside on a flat plastic surface.
did you remove all the props at once that would do it, with the drone camera facing you, the front right arm motor should have a single stripe prop ,the left rear prop has a single stripe prop, the front left and rear right have the two stripe props
Absolutely, was a bit of a question and a quiz in one.
i agree they are wrong. My wife owns one of these drones....there is a small mark on the rear left and one on the right front....these two arms take the double mark props, if that helps. most of the drones that I have flown always have some type of a marking that kind of helps when it comes to remembering what props goes where on the drone.what do you think is wrong
One quick way to tell if the rotation is correct if you forget that the arms with one mark are for the blades with two stripes is that the blades rotate the attack edge of each blade in towards the nose for the front blades and in towards the rear for the back. The OP's blades have the attack edge set up to rotate in from the sides. This is assuming the motors are on with the correct rotation.i agree they are wrong. My wife owns one of these drones....there is a small mark on the rear left and one on the right front....these two arms take the double mark props, if that helps. most of the drones that I have flown always have some type of a marking that kind of helps when it comes to remembering what props goes where on the drone.
I was going to say something like that too. The props are installed/mounted from the factory and there's no reason to remove them. One should avoid removing them unless necessary since they are mounted by screws, and it's easy to crossthread the screws, not screw them down enough, weaken the loctight, or put the props in the wrong place.I am wondering about the mismatched props. They are already screwed to the correct arms during manufacturing and I never have heared about DJI making a mistake of that kind yet. So I suspect that your "profeesional" who charged you £30 extra fee is responsible for this fault.
My Mini came all connected n ready to fly.I am wondering about the mismatched props. They are already screwed to the correct arms during manufacturing and I never have heared about DJI making a mistake of that kind yet. So I suspect that your "profeesional" who charged you £30 extra fee is responsible for this fault.