I know these batteries are intended to assist us in getting better battery life, but my question is on the low end, is there damage to the battery when you pull it down to 10% or lower. I do not like to go below 25% for many reasons, but just curious if anyone knows how accurate to the battery's bottom end capabilities are the indicators we get from the app. I have read some guys say they cancelled an emergency low battery landing and made is several hundred meters further to get home. While my logic would be to make a safe landing before I pushed that envelope, my curiosity is what are the drop dead (if you were caught over water for example), and when going that low, does it damage the battery?
Lithium batteries of all types, including the ones in your drone, do not like :
- Being at a very low charge level, especially for any length of time - this can fully ruin them and is what most often does
- Being too hot (they will swell and possibly start a fire or damage themselves and the casing)
- Being too cold during use (hence DJI's temperature recommendations)
- Being at maximum charge for long periods of time (DJI does protect against this though, they self discharge to 65% or so after ~10 days but it's not a good habit)
- Sitting for long periods of time without a charge/discharge cycle (for DJI this is a maximum of 3 months)
I personally would never run my batteries down to 10% or lower for a number of reasons including cell longevity, possible voltage drop (drone will crash), and having a safety buffer for the unexpected (i.e. headwind while returning). Almost every single thread I have read about someone's drone falling out of the sky was either at a battery percentage of less than 20% (possible voltage drop), or flying in temperatures below DJI's recommendation. 25-30% return home is best practice not only from a safety perspective, but also for your battery health. You can still get well over 20 minutes of flight time which I think is still very generous. Stories like "I ran it down to 0% once and it was fine" are not reasons to try it yourself IMHO.
Running it to zero and then charging it isn't going to ruin it in one go, but it is really not good for it, not to mention incredibly risky for your drone and possibly your liability. Running it to zero and then leaving it there is about the worst thing you could do. Another reason to have a healthy battery is if sometime down the road you ever do have to run it to zero or near zero in an emergency or unexpected scenario, it is more likely to tolerate it without a failure.