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How many here dont know how to fly?

Ive done alot research and did see sticks are tuneable to each users wants.

This is the mavic i might get today. Ive been researching and wondering if it will fill my wants. And maybe even make it so i no longer want a air3s

This mavic will follow well? Say at 35-45mph through hilly terrian?

You'll need an FPV pilot flying an Avata 2 (or non-DJI drone with a gopro) to follow at those speeds.

DJI focus track is limited to around 30mph on the fastest models.

Unfortunately, I'm not willing to go to Idaho 😁
 
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Ive been doing tons of research on camera stuff mainly camera stuff that flys. Watching tons of vids.

What i noticed is pilots appear to possibly not know how to fly. Like they rely on the **** things being uncrashable.

Not all but alot of pilot's seem all jerky and lack orientation awareness muscle memory to actually fly. Its a good thing these quads have all the technologies built in to pickup where humans lack.

How many come from a real flying back ground planes or helis?

Its been 10ish years since i was in the flying hobby and so much is changed. Lazy now comes to mind.

Its just an observation and its been along time since ive flown so maybe ive lost my ability to fly aswell.
Yes, I imagine having an aeronautical background, fixed wing pilot experience are helpful. Many years ago (exactly 1970) I was a doctor drafted into the USAF during the Viet Nam. war I served at Langley VA Hospital. I took 3 private flying lessons for $50.00 a lesson. It scared the crap out of me. On my last lesson, I got out of clinic late and started the lesson at 5 PM. The sun set and for the return to the field it was pitch dark outside. Luckily the teacher landed the plane. I was so scared, I never took another lesson. It taught me nothing that helped me with learning to fly a drone. Flying a drone smoothly has more to do with photographic techniques than aeronautical expertise, in my humble opinion.
Dale
 
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I’ve been flying airplanes since the 1970’s, even acrobatic airplanes when I started getting bored. Hanging a camera out the window was always a PITA, especially my huge pro Nikon F4S. I’ve been doing photography since the 1960’s and when drones came along it was an absolute no-brainer!
 
Can't imagine being able to fly like this:

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The sun set and for the return to the field it was pitch dark outside. Luckily the teacher landed the plane.
When I was taking flying lessons and working toward my night rating, my instructor had some sound advice on what to do if you experience an engine failure at night and need to make a forced landing.

If you can make it to a well-lit highway, make sure to pick the lane with car traffic going the same direction as you. Try to avoid the oncoming lane, eh.
Bright landing lights suck a lot of battery current. If your engine's not running, then the battery is not being recharged. Save the landing lights for when you actually need them. If you see nothing but black empty landscape below, pick something that looks to you like an empty flat field. When you do then turn on the landing lights and see nothing but a thick forest, just turn the landing lights off again...
 
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looking over my old vids
 
The thing that took me the longest to adjust to when flying a stabilized camera drone is that when you push the stick forward, the drone doesn't go into a dive. It just slides forward at the same altitude. Same with pulling the stick back, it doesn't pull it out of a dive, it just slides straight backward.

It can move forward/back and side-to-side in any direction, all while holding the same height. If you want to up or down, that's all controlled by the throttle stick. It takes a while to figure out how to smoothly combine those.

And then there's rudder (yaw)...
 
Been eyes this.

The bird cost about dame as air3s rc2 fly mord combo

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The thing that took me the longest to adjust to when flying a stabilized camera drone is that when you push the stick forward, the drone doesn't go into a dive. It just slides forward at the same altitude. Same with pulling the stick back, it doesn't pull it out of a dive, it just slides straight backward.

It can move forward/back and side-to-side in any direction, all while holding the same height. If you want to up or down, that's all controlled by the throttle stick. It takes a while to figure out how to smoothly combine those.

And then there's rudder (yaw)...
Thats kinda weird but cool
 
Ive been doing tons of research on camera stuff mainly camera stuff that flys. Watching tons of vids.

What i noticed is pilots appear to possibly not know how to fly. Like they rely on the **** things being uncrashable.

Not all but alot of pilot's seem all jerky and lack orientation awareness muscle memory to actually fly. Its a good thing these quads have all the technologies built in to pickup where humans lack.

How many come from a real flying back ground planes or helis?

Its been 10ish years since i was in the flying hobby and so much is changed. Lazy now comes to mind.

Its just an observation and its been along time since ive flown so maybe ive lost my ability to fly aswell.
IMG_4427.jpeg Read you loud and clear.

🇨🇦👍
 
I forgot to mention a VERY important Detail!!
Buying a second hand Drone is a great way to save money OR You could lose all your money and end up with a useless paperweight.
Before handing over that cash MAKE VERY SURE that the previous owner has unbound this drone from their DJI account!
Otherwise you cannot fly your new Drone and DJI WILL NOT Help you!
DO not buy the drone until you are sure it is "unbound"!!!!!

I had a large RC Chopper for a little bit....SCARED THE you know what out of me everytime I flew it. I ended up trading it for a Balsa CUB Kit at a swap meet. now I have a little Blade one that never sees air.
 
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And which pilot gets a new quadcopter for each flight? Maybe one of the pilots can fly with 1.8 kg of cargo in one direction? I can't fly beautifully and smoothly, I can't take photos. But our videos are prohibited from being posted on YouTube 🧨🙅😉
 
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Ive been doing tons of research on camera stuff mainly camera stuff that flys. Watching tons of vids.

What i noticed is pilots appear to possibly not know how to fly. Like they rely on the **** things being uncrashable.

Not all but alot of pilot's seem all jerky and lack orientation awareness muscle memory to actually fly. Its a good thing these quads have all the technologies built in to pickup where humans lack.

How many come from a real flying back ground planes or helis?

Its been 10ish years since i was in the flying hobby and so much is changed. Lazy now comes to mind.

Its just an observation and its been along time since ive flown so maybe ive lost my ability to fly aswell.
I'm trying to determine the purpose of this OP.

I speak English as a first language and can't decipher this thing.
 

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