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

Flight times

aerialscapes

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2018
Messages
113
Reactions
43
Age
44
What's everyone's usual flight times on the Mavic 4 Pro?

I am getting 20-22 mins usually with 15-20percent left on landing. I am flying all over during those flights and capturing a lot of stills and videos but I expected better flight times, it is barely better than my Mavic 2 pro it replaced.
 
Sounds about what you can expect from the Battery and still keep it "healthy" You will never achieve the Advertised Flight times.
Still the life of a DJI battery is Amazing. I fly FPV Drones and I am used to 3-8 Min Flights...I have to land My DJI FPV a few times to keep my fingers from getting tired! lol.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Dan'sUavTech
I'm getting at least 30 min. I have pushed it to almost 40 min. I am able to shoot a complete Commercial Real Estate job on one battery. This includes stills and at least one 360 orbit video.
 
I routinely get 35-40 minutes, filming about half the time. That's using sport to and from where I'm filming. I return with between 20-10% battery left. That's with landing gear, a battery lock and a tracker as a payload. I don't fly when it's real windy but it's generally a mountainous region so we deal with the mountain draw, lee waves, and regular up & down valley type winds. So depending on the time of day I'm flying the wind effect is different. I use this to my advantage. This drone handles the wind like no other! It barely budges from the flight path. I plug the batteries in the night before or morning of flying. This system works fine for me. I'm still on my original batteries and they work as good as new so far. There has been times the wind picks up unexpectedly (my grandpa would call this the rotor) & I ended the mission & returned home with the battery depleted more than usual. The return flight is usually windward when I'm not filming, while going to the site is most often down. I save battery this way. Although it can be a risky approach. As coming home is when I see the battery depleted the most. I also use the terrain with something called the ridge effect to help mitigate the battery loss. But I know the area & its behavior well. I come from a family of small aircraft pilots, mainly dropping off skydivers, hang gliders and training pilots. I myself never had the stomach for airplanes though. Depending on the conditions my battery can be depleted more or less than normal but it's usually to be expected. I would actually expect better battery life in a less mountainous region.
 
There has been times the wind picks up unexpectedly (my grandpa would call this the rotor) & I ended the mission & returned home with the battery depleted more than usual.

Rotor is the turbulent air downwind of a ridge or other obstruction. It's the downside of having ridge lift available upstream and above the obstruction. Gliders being towed to the ridge lift may have to pass through some very uncomfortable rotor to get there.

1.jpg


 
Rotor is the turbulent air downwind of a ridge or other obstruction. It's the downside of having ridge lift available upstream and above the obstruction. Gliders being towed to the ridge lift may have to pass through some very uncomfortable rotor to get there.

View attachment 187729


What does that have to do with anything? That's if your towing gliders? Like I said I fly up the mountain home most often so you don't know it's there until it is. Flying at drone heights is not the same as the effect is on airplanes or anything that flies above 500ft. It's much different the higher you go. I almost never go above 400-500ft high. Hang gliders start at 1000 + feet. There was a heart surgeon that my grandpa used to launch to hang glide, basically he died from the rotor a few years ago. Long after my grandparents stopped flying. He would always try to get them to launch him in dangerous conditions. Guess he paid for it eventually.
 
What does that have to do with anything? That's if your towing gliders? Like I said I fly up the mountain home most often so you don't know it's there until it is. Flying at drone heights is not the same as the effect is on airplanes or anything that flies above 500ft.

Rotor can form on the downwind side of 2000' tall ridge or the downwind side of a 100' ridge. or building, or a 50' tall highway billboard. The mechanics of fluid (air) flow, scale very nicely. If it's happens on the bid things, it happens on the small things, too, and vice versa. That's why wind tunnel testing works so well.
 
I routinely get 35-40 minutes, filming about half the time. That's using sport to and from where I'm filming. I return with between 20-10% battery left. That's with landing gear, a battery lock and a tracker as a payload. I don't fly when it's real windy but it's generally a mountainous region so we deal with the mountain draw, lee waves, and regular up & down valley type winds. So depending on the time of day I'm flying the wind effect is different. I use this to my advantage. This drone handles the wind like no other! It barely budges from the flight path. I plug the batteries in the night before or morning of flying. This system works fine for me. I'm still on my original batteries and they work as good as new so far. There has been times the wind picks up unexpectedly (my grandpa would call this the rotor) & I ended the mission & returned home with the battery depleted more than usual. The return flight is usually windward when I'm not filming, while going to the site is most often down. I save battery this way. Although it can be a risky approach. As coming home is when I see the battery depleted the most. I also use the terrain with something called the ridge effect to help mitigate the battery loss. But I know the area & its behavior well. I come from a family of small aircraft pilots, mainly dropping off skydivers, hang gliders and training pilots. I myself never had the stomach for airplanes though. Depending on the conditions my battery can be depleted more or less than normal but it's usually to be expected. I would actually expect better battery life in a less mountainous region.
Can you post screenshots of your flights from the DJI app to confirm these flight times? They seem crazy long!
 

DJI Drone Deals

New Threads

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
140,214
Messages
1,656,668
Members
168,227
Latest member
nad2315
Want to Remove this Ad? Simply login or create a free account