So, I’ve ordered an Insta360 Sphere, a nifty new 360-degree camera that straps tightly and securely to an Air 2 or an Air 2S and takes seamless 360º photos or video in all directions. It’s arriving next week; I’m eagerly looking forward to it. Anyone who owns an Air 2 or Air 2S should check it out.
The Sphere is built much like Insta360’s other cameras; I have the Insta360 One X2, and have had a good time hanging it from the belly of my Mavic, as I have previously detailed here. But the Sphere’s video promises to be much more seamless, vibration-free, and doesn’t require any postprocessing to get rid of the drone flying overhead.
For Mavic Air 2 pilots who have been deeply envious of the Air 2S’s capabilities, as I have been, this is a great equalizer. With this camera onboard, we’ll be able to take some truly amazing video, and those fancypants 2S people will have no advantage.
The Sphere doesn’t talk to the aircraft in any way; while the Mavic will send lovely live video back to the Fly app from its camera, everything is stuck on the Sphere until you land and transfer the files to the Insta360 app via Wi-Fi or pop out the SD card and process the files on your computer In the Insta360 desktop app.
I have an idea about this. Before we get started, I am well aware that this is potentially a very stupid idea.
The Insta360 phone app has the ability to live-stream 360º video it receives from the camera. This works for the One X2, and should for the Sphere as well. The trick is that the Wi-Fi range of the Sphere is said to be about 10 meters, which is about what it is for the One X2, though that’s less of an issue, because the One X2 is frequently within 10 meters of where my phone and I am.
So! Would it be [possible/advisable/horribly dangerous] to strap a phone to the top of the Mavic, fire up the Insta360 app on that phone, get live-streaming going, go for a flight, and then have the phone, over its cellular connection, live-stream the 360 aerial video from the Sphere? I believe it would be pretty cool if it could.
Some data: The Sphere weighs 192 grams altogether. The very biggest iPhone, the 13 Pro Max, weighs 240 grams. (Obviously, a smaller phone would be better, but this is the one I own. An IPhone 13 Mini, for reference, is just 141 grams.) The Air 2 weighs 570 grams itself and can lift up to another 830 grams, though it will just barely get off the ground if it’s hauling that much cargo. I ran tests where I had it haul 533 grams around, and it handled that pretty well. The Sphere and an onboard iPhone 13 Pro Max would weigh only 432 grams, plus a couple of grams of gaffer tape to secure the phone. (Sphere + iPhone mini would be only 333 grams…)
The GPS antenna on the Air 2 appears to be on top, toward the back legs; I‘m thinking you’d want to scoot the phone as far forward as you could, maybe crossways, to keep it clear of the Mavic’s GPS.
Think this would work? Any tips/warnings? Thanks!
The Sphere is built much like Insta360’s other cameras; I have the Insta360 One X2, and have had a good time hanging it from the belly of my Mavic, as I have previously detailed here. But the Sphere’s video promises to be much more seamless, vibration-free, and doesn’t require any postprocessing to get rid of the drone flying overhead.
For Mavic Air 2 pilots who have been deeply envious of the Air 2S’s capabilities, as I have been, this is a great equalizer. With this camera onboard, we’ll be able to take some truly amazing video, and those fancypants 2S people will have no advantage.
The Sphere doesn’t talk to the aircraft in any way; while the Mavic will send lovely live video back to the Fly app from its camera, everything is stuck on the Sphere until you land and transfer the files to the Insta360 app via Wi-Fi or pop out the SD card and process the files on your computer In the Insta360 desktop app.
I have an idea about this. Before we get started, I am well aware that this is potentially a very stupid idea.
The Insta360 phone app has the ability to live-stream 360º video it receives from the camera. This works for the One X2, and should for the Sphere as well. The trick is that the Wi-Fi range of the Sphere is said to be about 10 meters, which is about what it is for the One X2, though that’s less of an issue, because the One X2 is frequently within 10 meters of where my phone and I am.
So! Would it be [possible/advisable/horribly dangerous] to strap a phone to the top of the Mavic, fire up the Insta360 app on that phone, get live-streaming going, go for a flight, and then have the phone, over its cellular connection, live-stream the 360 aerial video from the Sphere? I believe it would be pretty cool if it could.
Some data: The Sphere weighs 192 grams altogether. The very biggest iPhone, the 13 Pro Max, weighs 240 grams. (Obviously, a smaller phone would be better, but this is the one I own. An IPhone 13 Mini, for reference, is just 141 grams.) The Air 2 weighs 570 grams itself and can lift up to another 830 grams, though it will just barely get off the ground if it’s hauling that much cargo. I ran tests where I had it haul 533 grams around, and it handled that pretty well. The Sphere and an onboard iPhone 13 Pro Max would weigh only 432 grams, plus a couple of grams of gaffer tape to secure the phone. (Sphere + iPhone mini would be only 333 grams…)
The GPS antenna on the Air 2 appears to be on top, toward the back legs; I‘m thinking you’d want to scoot the phone as far forward as you could, maybe crossways, to keep it clear of the Mavic’s GPS.
Think this would work? Any tips/warnings? Thanks!