Yesterday I test flew for the first time my recently acquired Mavic Pro Platinum. My drone landing pad is a 4-foot on edge plywood sheet standing on foot-tall wooden legs, with one at each corner and one at the center to prevent the plywood sheet from sagging in the middle. Those table legs are affixed with metal nails, which was a concern until I successfully flew several different drones off that table with no issues on takeoff or landing.
I have launched my Phantom 3S,, Phantom 3 Pro, and Mavic Pro from this plywood landing pad numerous times with no anomalies observed, but that changed when I flew the Mavic Pro Platinum from the same platform. Right away "magnetic interference" messages appeared on my iPad's Litchi screen, and the tail light flashed red and orange, as opposed to the green tail light that illuminates steadily on the Mavic Pro, whose Litchi screen issues no magnetic interference error messages when launched from the same exact wooden platform.
I happen to own a Fimi X8 2020 drone that regularly issues magnetic interference error messages, but because writers in a forum devoted to that drone reported no adverse consequences to simply ignoring those warnings and launching the drone, I decided to launch this Mavic Pro Platinum on a short test flight within visual range. In both GPS Position Mode and in Sport Mode, the Mavic Pro Platinum performed flawlessly in every regard except for the color of that tail light, which alternated between red and orange, rather than the expected green color.
Next, I sent the Mavic Pro Platinum on a 15-minute pre-planned Litchi mission that lay within signal reach of the controller. Again, there was no indication that the drone's performance and ability to follow a GPS-defined flight path were in any way compromised by those mysterious magnetic interference error messages that kept popping up. All this brings me to my question, which is whether in fact magnetic interference error messages can in some instances be ignored at no cost in terms of degraded performance or Litchi mission reliability. I would be grateful for any experiences that can be shared on this topic.
I have launched my Phantom 3S,, Phantom 3 Pro, and Mavic Pro from this plywood landing pad numerous times with no anomalies observed, but that changed when I flew the Mavic Pro Platinum from the same platform. Right away "magnetic interference" messages appeared on my iPad's Litchi screen, and the tail light flashed red and orange, as opposed to the green tail light that illuminates steadily on the Mavic Pro, whose Litchi screen issues no magnetic interference error messages when launched from the same exact wooden platform.
I happen to own a Fimi X8 2020 drone that regularly issues magnetic interference error messages, but because writers in a forum devoted to that drone reported no adverse consequences to simply ignoring those warnings and launching the drone, I decided to launch this Mavic Pro Platinum on a short test flight within visual range. In both GPS Position Mode and in Sport Mode, the Mavic Pro Platinum performed flawlessly in every regard except for the color of that tail light, which alternated between red and orange, rather than the expected green color.
Next, I sent the Mavic Pro Platinum on a 15-minute pre-planned Litchi mission that lay within signal reach of the controller. Again, there was no indication that the drone's performance and ability to follow a GPS-defined flight path were in any way compromised by those mysterious magnetic interference error messages that kept popping up. All this brings me to my question, which is whether in fact magnetic interference error messages can in some instances be ignored at no cost in terms of degraded performance or Litchi mission reliability. I would be grateful for any experiences that can be shared on this topic.