Hello Everyone:
I'm (obviously) a very new pilot and I have a question.
I'm going to be flying at a point where I will take off from a certain spot and then descend into a relatively deep where I will take pictures and record some video. So my question is, will this create issues with the GPS or other censors in the drone?
For example, if I take off at one point and then descend into a canyon and fly in an area that is, say 100 feet lower than the point where I took off, will that create any problems? If I hit RTH, will the drone fly up to a point that is equal to where the drone was launched (while hovering in the canyon) and then fly HIGER to the point that I set in the controller (based on where I launched the drone) and then come home? Or will it ascend the number of feet that I set in the controller and get stuck because it's still in the canyon (because it didn't compensate for the initial descent into the canyon)?
Anyway, are there any particular steps I should take under this scenario? Thanks, and sorry for the dumb question.
I'm (obviously) a very new pilot and I have a question.
I'm going to be flying at a point where I will take off from a certain spot and then descend into a relatively deep where I will take pictures and record some video. So my question is, will this create issues with the GPS or other censors in the drone?
For example, if I take off at one point and then descend into a canyon and fly in an area that is, say 100 feet lower than the point where I took off, will that create any problems? If I hit RTH, will the drone fly up to a point that is equal to where the drone was launched (while hovering in the canyon) and then fly HIGER to the point that I set in the controller (based on where I launched the drone) and then come home? Or will it ascend the number of feet that I set in the controller and get stuck because it's still in the canyon (because it didn't compensate for the initial descent into the canyon)?
Anyway, are there any particular steps I should take under this scenario? Thanks, and sorry for the dumb question.