I too bought a charging bag that I don't use.WOW !!! That is a scary situation. I purchased charging bags and i fail to used it. I will start doing it again.
Hi Jim,So for those of us who live in Condos or Apartments, where we have no place to charge batteries except on the kitchen shelf or the counter in the bathroom or by the outlet near the floor in the office or bedroom, we would really like as much detail as to the age of the battery, the number of charging cycles, whether you ever noted heat, bulging, swelling and anything else you can think of to provide us with things to look for, be careful about, etc. This is scary stuff and while we know that ANYTHING can happen, we'd like some assurance that this is an anomaly.
How old were the batteries, and how many cycles did they have on them?I absolutely do not trust the batteries for my Mavic 2 anymore. I’ll continue to fly my Mini 2, but after experiencing what I did, I’m done with the Mavic 2.
The battery didn’t just start on fire, it was shooting flames like a jet. Something like a firework is my best explanation. It even sounded like it wanted to launch - I was seriously expecting it to explode by how hard it was out gassing, the sound it was making, and how the flames were jetting out of it, and the sheer volume of smoke it put out.
When the flames slowed down and I could see through the smoke, I grabbed it and put it in and old frying pan and took it outside. I’m guessing that was 20 to 30 seconds after it started.
And FWIW, I’ve never crashed the Mavic, its never had any trauma, always kept indoors so the batteries have never been exposed to any extreme weather conditions, etc. Nothing out of the ordinary in any way.
Check those battery manufacturing dates, you might have some of the defect batch period.2. Inspecting the remaining batteries, number 3 has a ever so slight bulge on the bottom. It’s not much, but I can tell by comparing it to number 1.
These things do exist, though not all are created equal. Here's one example: Charging boxI'm wondering if it would be worth getting a fire-resistant safe as a place to charge/store batteries? Not for the 'safe' aspect, but the fire resistance.
Think you need a new frying pan.....So I was putting my batteries on the charger this morning in prep of flying my Mavic 2 Pro this afternoon when one of the batteries suddenly shot out a stream of gas (?), instantly starting smoking then burst into flames. Thank God I was in the kitchen right next to the sink. If this had happened anywhere else in our home, it would have burned the place down. The flames were strong in the sink shooting up almost a foot. The smoke was so bad that I couldn’t see the other side of the kitchen. Now the other two batteries are on the concrete in the garage until I figure out how I’m going to dispose of them. I don’t want them in my vehicle and they are not ever coming back into our home.
I just wanted to share with everyone my near disaster.
I call BS. Statement from a good friends surgeon when he was skeptical of a robot performing his knee replacement….”yes sir I can do it myself but I am one of the best in the country and that robot can do a much better job that will allow you to heal faster”. Thinking that you can monitor battery charging better than a well made BMS is simply arrogance.You are an engineer, I'm a Medical Doctor. Technology helps us every day and always be glad for it. New horizons of treatments and diagnostics that were unimaginable yesterday are real today thanks to technology. This statemen also applies to other aspects of our lives. But if for any reason there is a discrepancy between what a machine (of any kind) says and what I'm able to interpret using my five senses, my knowledge and experience, you have no doubt that I will distrust what the machine says and will follow my reasoning and capabilities. Human capabilities CAN"T be supplemented by machines, reason why we still have F1 pilots, presidents, engineers like you, doctors, teachers, etc.
I trust DJI technology, I use their drones, but I trust myself better.
Not to beat a dead horse, just now reading the responses to your original post (which I agree 100% with) and surprised at how people have responded.I'll trust the pilot following the tech, don't you? Trust the human being, capable and prepared to follow the tech. Human first, machine after. It's simple.
Not to beat a dead horse, just now reading the responses to your original post (which I agree 100% with) and surprised at how people have responded.
Healthcare professional here, Respiratory Therapist for 35 years. Technology has made our lives so much easier, but the body count and malpractice suits would be astronomical if those of us who depend on the technology trusted it implicitly. Determining a patient's oxygen saturation used to require an arterial blood draw (very painful) and an expensive test, now I can clip an oximeter on the patient's finger and get that information within seconds. But the number of times I've seen caregivers panic over an erroneous reading is worrisome. Being called STAT for an intubation only to meet a patient who is wide awake, no signs of cyanosis, but with poor peripheral circulation resulting in a reading that indicates the person is about to code. My knowledge and experience, and intelligence requires me to double check and analyze every read out on my ventilators, blindly trusting those numbers could be fatal. Every aspect of technology in a hospital setting requires those who use it to know its limitations and fallibility. And we need to know how to not let it outsmart us.
That analogy, I think, works well with lipo batteries. The technology of DJI's smart batteries (and even some of the new RC fixed wing smart batteries) has made them so much safer to charge and store, but the reality is they can still fail. Airlines know this. Everyone of us who charges them in the sink, oven, lipo bag, baking dish, etc., appears to know this as well. Why else are we trying to mitigate any potential damage? I monitor every rechargable battery, whether "smart"or not.
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