^^^ This. Initially I was hand catching AND launching everyday after purchase just to be proficient in flying from anywhere. For example, the confederate Fort Paulaski in Savannah is a State Park and the only way to get photos of the outside of the fort with Union cannon balls still stuck in the wall is from launching off a road in the marsh outside of Park land. No way at all to land this thing or take off if I couldn't do it from my hand. Its a FORT, for crying out loud.. lol Its pretty in-accessible from anything sticking out a mile away from the ocean and a mile away from any road and where I would launch on a calm cloudless day.Yes with the mini3P due to its low profile to the ground.
Seldom with the M3 although I have done it a number of times to become proficient if a need to do so arises.
I have had this happen to me and heard others with the same story. I believe the biggest factor is pulling the drone down a little immediately after grabbing it. The drone revs trying to regain altitude. I have learned that when you have grabbed the drone it helps to raise it a little and the drone realizes it is going up with no effort of it own and seems to shut off quicker. (Of course all while holding the stick down.)There are pilots that may find themselves having a drone spool to full throttle while in their hand and if you don't know why, or what to do in those types of situations, they can panic and get hurt.
Not just downward movement, but also and sideways or forward/back or yawing movement before the shut down phase can cause the drone to start trying to reposition itself and any resistance will cause a full power ramp up very quickly.I have had this happen to me and heard others with the same story. I believe the biggest factor is pulling the drone down a little immediately after grabbing it. The drone revs trying to regain altitude. I have learned that when you have grabbed the drone it helps to raise it a little and the drone realizes it is going up with no effort of it own and seems to shut off quicker.
I guess you have to have the control in one hand and catch it with the other?I do hand catch or launch most of the times but on windy conditions I always avoid!!
Once practiced a few times it becomes natural but still with caution.
Yes" but to catch you can rest controller just bring it down to just above head height and from behind the drone catch it!I guess you have to have the control in one hand and catch it with the other?
No it's not, and there's no reason to be insulting to people.Hand catching is ridiculous and not worth it.
Almost never. The sole exception is when I’m flying the Insta360 Sphere camera on an Air 2s. Although Insta360 says to launch/land on the included pad, I just can’t bear to set this thing down on it’s lower fish-eye lens. In the interest of image quality I do not use the clear plastic lens covers Insta360 supplies.
It’s not risk-free. I further wear a cut-proof glove and safety glasses whenever I fly the Sphere.
My thinking exactly.I don’t quite know how to best understand hand-launching and hand-catching as “a habit of professional drone pilots.” In my view, a working professional recognizes risks to people and property and minimizes them to the extent possible. If they feel the risks aren’t acceptable they find another way to get the job done or walk away.
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