They all have default settings that you can change if you choose to.
But none of these auto disable anything.
When your video guy says at 4:12 that the
Mavic 2 in P mode auto disables OA, he is incorrect.
If you have OA enabled, you get OA.
If you disable OA, you get extra speed because OA is disabled and the drone can tilt further.
If you choose to fly with OA enabled in any of them, your P-GPS speed is less than the max possible P-GPS speed.
Actually I'm pretty sure I'm correct as I thoroughly tested this. The original Mavic Pro will, by default, limit its pitch to ensure the collision avoidance sensors continue to work, thus greatly limiting the pitch and subsequent speed it can maintain in high wind. Taken from the
Mavic 1 Pro manual:
"When the Forward Vision System is enabled and lighting conditions are sufficient, the maximum flight attitude angle is 16' with maximum flight speed of 22 mph (36 kph).
When the Forward Vision System is disabled, the maximum flight attitude angle is 25' and the maximum flight speed is 36 mph (58 kph).
So if you manually disable the collision avoidance on the Pro 1, then it too will pitch far steeper and handle the wind far better, and I proved that in another wind test for the original Mavic Pro (video below: link starts at demo point).
Conversely the Mavic Air and the
Mavic 2 Pro warn you that collision avoidance sensors are no longer working when encountering very strong wind, and both models continue to pitch very steeply into the wind.
Chris' statement could be better worded by saying:
mavic pro - collision avoidance on by default - limits pitch
mavic air - allows very steep pitch that stops sensors working
mavic pro 2 - allows very steep pitch that stops sensors working
And so his question is valid; if the Mavic Mini's top speed is 29 mph in Sports Mode, but only 18 mph in P Mode, two questions arise:
1, why does it appear to switch you from S mode to P mode if it initiates an auto-RTH, and
2, why doesn't it just use the maximum power and speed that it could achieve in S mode, even if it doesn't actually switch mode?.
Note the logs from my New Year's Eve blowaway; you can see I manually changed to Sports Mode at 12:37, then at 18% battery (19:16), the auto RTH kicked in, and then after I realised how wasn't working, I had to manually switch to Sport Mode again, at 19:46.
As Old Man Mavic rightly points out, either way, the Mini is not capable of handling strong wind, but to me, it could do better by utilising the maximum power available to it....
Cheers, Ian in London