I was in the river canyon, as usual, was flying with no GPS but M3 recorded something in the middle of the ocean thousands of kilometers away the only true data is flight length here
In those cases, I fly nearby to avoid RTH situations as M3 will not return to me for sureAt least altitude is positive and not under water...
But better hope that return to home doesn't activate.
Hi AlexIn those cases, I fly nearby to avoid RTH situations as M3 will not return to me for sure
Dear Bussty, M3 have some GPS issues - they almost solve them with the last update, but in such confined places it just happens sometimes to have no clear coverage - how he record this point is a mystery for me but such things happened - my MP a few years ago changed his home point mid-flight to a position 14 km's away on the other side of the mountain and immediately tried to engage RTH as the battery was obviously not enough to reach it luckily I was able to stop it and return to me on visual ...Hi Alex
So what's going on there? How can the drone record a Home Point if it has never had lock? Surely lock can only be activated when the correct HDOP is reached and in that case would be "reasonably" accurate?
Also lets say in your scenario the drone did regain GPS lock and you had a phone malfunction or controller issue and it engaged RTH and sped off towards the middle of the ocean, would there be anything you could do to stop it? Quite scary really I would be wanting DJI to explain how it's creating that Home Point?
When I was testing Dronelink with my Mini a few times it just disengaged and initiated RTH so if I was in your situation I would be in trouble. Mind you I probably wouldn't be testing autonomous drone software in a Canyon
I wonder home many times drone pilots fly drones when the Homepoint isn't right but never engage RTH or have a disconnect to experience a flyaway?
OMG I didn't even think about the battery issue! Of course if you can't get back on remaining battery it will send you home ASAP! So assume you can in that case hit the RTH button to cancel?Dear Bussty, M3 have some GPS issues - they almost solve them with the last update, but in such confined places it just happens sometimes to have no clear coverage - how he record this point is a mystery for me but such things happened - my MP a few years ago changed his home point mid-flight to a position 14 km's away on the other side of the mountain and immediately tried to engage RTH as the battery was obviously not enough to reach it luckily I was able to stop it and return to me on visual ...
My only problem now is DJI prevents M3 to rise more than 30 meters when GPS is poor and I miss some waterfalls and rocks other than that it's OK - there are places where GPS coverage is poor especially when they expect 12+ sats Not inline
It never happened.Dear Bussty, M3 have some GPS issues - they almost solve them with the last update, but in such confined places it just happens sometimes to have no clear coverage - how he record this point is a mystery for me but such things happened
If that's what actually happened (you'd need to look into the data to see if it really did), you would want to reset the drone's home point.OMG I didn't even think about the battery issue! Of course if you can't get back on remaining battery it will send you home ASAP! So assume you can in that case hit the RTH button to cancel?
It's hard to imagine how the drone could create a false home point.What's the forum view? If your drone creates a "false" Home Point then fly's away to get to it.... you SHOULD be covered by DJI for a warranty replacement?
Ok this is good to know could see massive issues for DJI if was the case. Does ask the question about the 14km issue above, was that just early days with the MP?If that's what actually happened (you'd need to look into the data to see if it really did), you would want to reset the drone's home point.
It's hard to imagine how the drone could create a false home point.
GPS doesn't work like that.
No ... things like that don't happen now and didn't happen in early days of the Mavic Pro.Ok this is good to know could see massive issues for DJI if was the case. Does ask the question about the 14km issue above, was that just early days with the MP?
Confidence restored!No ... things like that don't happen now and didn't happen in early days of the Mavic Pro.
I'd want to see the flight data to work out what actually happened before accepting that it did.
Now this is a scary realization . . .OMG I didn't even think about the battery issue! Of course if you can't get back on remaining battery it will send you home ASAP! So assume you can in that case hit the RTH button to cancel?
Thank you Meta4 . . . I'm learning a lot.If that's what actually happened (you'd need to look into the data to see if it really did), you would want to reset the drone's home point.
It's hard to imagine how the drone could create a false home point.
GPS doesn't work like that.
Luckily sounds like it should be impossible for drone to create a false homepoint unless your drone and GPS system is having a really bad day in which case DJI should cover youNow this is a scary realization . . .
Yes!! The second I read that, the realization hit me hard. I responded BEFORE I read Meta4''s post that calmed us down and cleared things up. I'm good now . . .Luckily sounds like it should be impossible for drone to create a false homepoint unless your drone and GPS system is having a really bad day in which case DJI should cover you
Your drone waits until it has good GPS location data before recording a home point.Luckily sounds like it should be impossible for drone to create a false homepoint unless your drone and GPS system is having a really bad day in which case DJI should cover you
Yes!! The second I read that, the realization hit me hard. I responded BEFORE I read Meta4''s post that calmed us down and cleared things up. I'm good now . . .
Your drone waits until it has good GPS location data before recording a home point.
It doesn't record a home point when it might get a tentative location from a poor quality 2D fix, but waith until it has more satellites in a good geometric array to give a quality 3D fix.
The false alarm that started this thread was due to Airdata mishandling the blank location data and plotting a false "homepoint" on the map display.
Usually Airdata would plot that to 0° S 0° E, which would be north of where it's showing on that map.
The drone never recorded a homepoint at all, because it never had good GPS location data.
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