Hi,
I understand that blowaways are one of most common causes for drone loss, and flying in windy days must be very careful, that’s why pilots gets high wind warnings
. However, my experience is that those messages starts to pop up even with winds like 3m/s (according to UAV tool), which is way below MM limit 8m/s.
I guess, that if MM can sense when to send the “high wind warning”, it needs to measure how strong the wind is, and from which directio it blows. So, can we see more details about the wind?
I tried an experiment: to fly in circle. I’d expect that when flying against the wind dron is slower (yes, I can see that), and flying with the wind dron is faster (well, a bit it is, but I have never seen speeds over 13m/s, which should be maximum speed in S mode with no wind conditions). So this way I can not reliably measure actual wind speed. UAV is great tool, but it is based on meteorogical forecast models, which are actualised like every 5 hours or so.
Looking forward to see what is your approach to measuring the wind...and to decide when (not) to fly.
I understand that blowaways are one of most common causes for drone loss, and flying in windy days must be very careful, that’s why pilots gets high wind warnings

I guess, that if MM can sense when to send the “high wind warning”, it needs to measure how strong the wind is, and from which directio it blows. So, can we see more details about the wind?
I tried an experiment: to fly in circle. I’d expect that when flying against the wind dron is slower (yes, I can see that), and flying with the wind dron is faster (well, a bit it is, but I have never seen speeds over 13m/s, which should be maximum speed in S mode with no wind conditions). So this way I can not reliably measure actual wind speed. UAV is great tool, but it is based on meteorogical forecast models, which are actualised like every 5 hours or so.
Looking forward to see what is your approach to measuring the wind...and to decide when (not) to fly.