- Joined
- Jun 16, 2019
- Messages
- 21
- Reactions
- 10
I am a bit annoyed seeing people asking very basic or even advance questions from Canadian (I’m Canadian too). I read people saying that they went flying and crashed their expensive Drone within 48 hours of have received their drone in the mail, there is no way you read all policies and the whole Mavic 2 Manual which is a requirement in Canada. Guys, as soon as you pass you pilot license, you are a PILOT! take this seriously.
The first time I received my first drone, I refrained from trying to fly it before I exactly knew how to fly it (simulator), read all documentation on the Mavic 2 (manual, batteries, app manual, etc), policies, and regulation. I then compile all required documentation needed when you go fly. If you don’t, It’s like driving a car not knowing where the brake pedal is. The manual covers a lot if not everything you need to know about your machine.
I don’t know what are the regulation and policies in other countries, but in Canada as soon as you pass your license, you are a drone pilot, which comes with responsibilities and legal sanctions if the laws are not properly followed.
Why do I bring this up, because our government proactively change the laws base on the media, and as soon as there is a drone incident of accident, we are being looked at, and bills pass to reinforce the regulation, which at one point becomes almost impossible to fly anywhere.
If you are a new pilot, don’t assume you have the skills to fly because you passed you license and watched a couple YouTube videos on your phone, and review the electronic version of your manual as it changes as soon as DJI pushes and update
Reference;
www.tc.gc.ca
Read again part 9 of the regulation;
www.tc.gc.ca
Mavic 2 electronic Manual is now at version 2.0 with new features;
www.dji.com
Don’t be the person who will penalize all of us by your actions.
My 2 cents
The first time I received my first drone, I refrained from trying to fly it before I exactly knew how to fly it (simulator), read all documentation on the Mavic 2 (manual, batteries, app manual, etc), policies, and regulation. I then compile all required documentation needed when you go fly. If you don’t, It’s like driving a car not knowing where the brake pedal is. The manual covers a lot if not everything you need to know about your machine.
I don’t know what are the regulation and policies in other countries, but in Canada as soon as you pass your license, you are a drone pilot, which comes with responsibilities and legal sanctions if the laws are not properly followed.
Why do I bring this up, because our government proactively change the laws base on the media, and as soon as there is a drone incident of accident, we are being looked at, and bills pass to reinforce the regulation, which at one point becomes almost impossible to fly anywhere.
If you are a new pilot, don’t assume you have the skills to fly because you passed you license and watched a couple YouTube videos on your phone, and review the electronic version of your manual as it changes as soon as DJI pushes and update
Reference;
Drone safety - Transport Canada
Information on flying drones, unmanned air vehicles or unmanned aircraft systems for recreation, work, or research
Read again part 9 of the regulation;
Canadian Aviation Regulations (SOR/96-433) - Transport Canada
Information profile for the Canadian Aviation Regulations (SOR 96-433)
Mavic 2 electronic Manual is now at version 2.0 with new features;

Mavic Pro - Product Information - DJI
The DJI Mavic Pro has a 4K camera, ultra-precise 3-axis gimbal, and a max transmission range of 4.1 mi (7 km). Learn more about the Mavic Pro with specs, tutorial guides, and user manuals. Download the DJI GO app to capture and share beautiful content.
Don’t be the person who will penalize all of us by your actions.
My 2 cents