DJI Mavic, Air and Mini Drones
Friendly, Helpful & Knowledgeable Community
Join Us Now

Discharge All 3 Air 3S Batteries Before Airline Trip?

Steelgtr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2016
Messages
162
Reactions
18
Age
76
How can I discharge my 3 Air 3S batteries to safe level before air travel soon without having to use the drone to do it? I have the fly more combo with the charging caddy.

thx

bob
 
How can I discharge my 3 Air 3S batteries to safe level before air travel soon without having to use the drone to do it? I have the fly more combo with the charging caddy.
You don't need to discharge your batteries before taking them on a plane.
No-one at the airport will care or want to check the battery charge levels.
No airline or air safety agency requires that.
It's just one of the myths that circulate in drone forums.
Another myth is that you need to pack them in LiPo bags.

Check your airline's website and look for a section regarding batteries or dangerous goods to see their requirements.
The important one will be that batteries go in your carry on luggage, not in checked luggage.
 
You don't need to discharge your batteries before taking them on a plane.
No-one at the airport will care or want to check the battery charge levels.
No airline or air safety agency requires that.
It's just one of the myths that circulate in drone forums.
Another myth is that you need to pack them in LiPo bags.

Check your airline's website and look for a section regarding batteries or dangerous goods to see their requirements.
The important one will be that batteries go in your carry on luggage, not in checked luggage.
Thanks, I never had an issue before but it's been 3 years. Thanks
 
I’ve always carried mine fully charged (3 batteries in a fly more combo).

Have always kept one of the batteries in the drone and the other two in the charging hub.

Last year I was told by airport security to take the battery out of the drone and put it in the charging hub with the other two for a Jet2 flight from Larnaca (Cyprus) to London Stansted but they didn’t care about the charge status of the batteries.

Hope this helps
 
  • Like
Reactions: Steelgtr
I have repeatedly traveled domestically and internationally with my drone (with one battery in the drone and the other two in the charging hub) and never had a problem. The batteries (and the drone itself), if it has a battery in it) must be in your carry-on luggage. But aside from that, relax.
 
I have repeatedly traveled domestically and internationally with my drone (with one battery in the drone and the other two in the charging hub) and never had a problem. The batteries (and the drone itself), if it has a battery in it) must be in your carry-on luggage. But aside from that, relax.
I have been able to keep the battery in the drone through security on all flights until last year but for some reason they were adamant that I remove the battery from the drone before boarding
 
  • Like
Reactions: Steelgtr
When I travel with spare batteries in my Drone bag, I cover the exposed contacts of the unmounted batteries with a simple 2x2 inch duct tape patch. This prevents any possible short circuit for that battery due metallic items in the bag. Easy on easy off.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Steelgtr
You don't need to discharge your batteries before taking them on a plane.
No-one at the airport will care or want to check the battery charge levels.
No airline or air safety agency requires that.
It's just one of the myths that circulate in drone forums.
Another myth is that you need to pack them in LiPo bags.

Check your airline's website and look for a section regarding batteries or dangerous goods to see their requirements.
The important one will be that batteries go in your carry on luggage, not in checked luggage.
I don’t discharge my Batteries and I have taken them all over the World! But I do keep my spare battery in the Case and restrains on my Drone and that’s it!
 
I’ve been asked to power on the drone before so they could check the batteries had power.
 
I just flew 2 months ago and I had to declare that I didn't have any Li-Ion batteries in my luggage.
I think that was the only thing they mentioned about batteries.
Correct, no Li-ion batteries in checked luggage.

I've flown several times per year for the last few years, always with my drone and batteries in my carry-on backpack. About 25% of the time I get the hands-on security screening of the bag, but no one has ever taken issue with the batteries.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Steelgtr
I just flew 2 months ago and I had to declare that I didn't have any Li-Ion batteries in my luggage.
I think that was the only thing they mentioned about batteries.
I assume you mean that you had to declare you had no Lipos in your checked luggage? They are surely allowed in your cabin luggage.
 
I assume you mean that you had to declare you had no Lipos in your checked luggage? They are surely allowed in your cabin luggage.
It's entirely possible. I was running on just a couple hours of sleep.
I don't recall seeing a sign on my return flight but I had a battery backup CPAP in my checked luggage. I don't know what the battery is in that thing but it's supposed to be able to power it for quite a few hours.
 
Not recommending any practice or protocol here. Just informing.

The danger with lithium ion batteries is the rate at which they can release energy. Formally this is Power, watts. A shorted cell can dump it's entire stored energy in less than a minute. This is a lot like gasoline. Rapid release of energy is what an explosion is.

Compare gasoline to kerosene. Squirt BBQ lighter fluid all over some briquettes and put a match to it, and is gradually lights and spreads. Try that with the same amount of gasoline.

So the biggest risk with lithium ion batteries is when they're charged. Depleted batteries don't explode. They don't catch fire. They get warm, even hot but not catastrophically so, if shorted.

We don't have the option to deplete our batteries to the maximum degree just short of damaging them. The BMS gets in the way. Also, depleting them to a safe but undamaged level requires technical sophistication beyond most users. So we don't even talk about it.

All that said, the safest way to travel with your batteries is to run them down to absolute forced-on-the-ground landing while holding full throttle stick. Then, 5-10 hours after traveling, charge them so they don't stay in this depleted state for long. It's like shipping and empty gas can with fumes, vs. a full can.

That's the safest. It is also utterly impractical.
 
Not really. A can of fumes can explode. A can of gasoline is very unlikely to explode.
There's actually a golden ratio for gasoline to explode. It will explode between 6:1 and 20:1 but maximum efficiency is around 14.5:1

Funny story. My grandpa used to flick his cigarettes into an open bucket of gas that he would use to wash car parts. The butts would just go out like they were dropped in water. Until that one day when it didn't.
FWIW, he died of cancer at 56 years old. I'm sure the smoking was the biggest part but washing parts in gasoline didn't help.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CadrePilot

DJI Drone Deals

New Threads

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
136,085
Messages
1,613,326
Members
164,659
Latest member
Augustars
Want to Remove this Ad? Simply login or create a free account