It's not
only the Fly More case that's causing the prop deformation. It's
also the original plastic shell which non-Fly More Minis are shipped in. Common to both is the way the blades are crossed when stored.
The latest firmware (v01.00.0500) introduced a new feature that alerts you to excessive motor speeds and instructs you to replace the prop blades on the identified motor. The reason the warning is sometimes triggered even on brand new Minis, and even on Minis with recently replaced propellers, is due to how the blades are
bent while stored in the crossed position.
The label in the Fly More case shows the left-rear blades (A&B) folded under the right-rear blades when the Mini is stored with arms folded.
View attachment 105928
First off, that label is already inaccurate as it is impossible to position them like this (with A
under B) since the leading edge of A cannot be forced
under the trailing edge of B.
View attachment 105929
Regardless of that particular inaccuracy, the Mini is shipped with both left-rear blades (A&B) folded
under the right-rear blades.
That is why the Motor Speed Error most often first identifies the left-rear blades as needing replacement, even on brand new Mavic Minis.
My Mini was always stored (with blades crossed) in its Fly More case, and I was never aware of any prop issue until my first flight after updating to the latest firmware. The new Motor Speed Error instructed me to replace the left-rear prop blades.
Here's a photo comparing the new left-rear blades versus the old original right-rear blades. Note how the fresh left blades are straight and now stand higher than the old right blades. The right-rear blades easily slide
under the left blades when crossed.
View attachment 105918
Next is a photo with
both the left-rear
and right-rear props replaced with fresh new blades. Now you can see how both sides
cross, with neither side wanting to fit
under the opposite side when folded together. Blade #1 is straight and un-deflected, while blade #2 has to be
bent down in order to
force it to nest under the opposite side's blades.
View attachment 105932
Here is someone else's photo of a Mini still in its plastic shipping tray, with DJI's paper band securing the prop blades in their stowed crossed position.
View attachment 105933
And this is the how the rear prop blades look, straight out of the box, with the paper band still keeping the blades fixed in their "proper" stowed configuration. Clearly the left-rear blades are bent to fit under the right-rear blades like this.
View attachment 105934
That is why the left-rear blades are almost always the first to trigger the Motor Speed Error warning. If you store yours the other way around, with the right-side blades bent under the left-side blades, then you'll likely have the Motor Speed Error identify the right-rear motor first.
So why do the
front motors hardly ever trigger a similar warning? It's because of the way the motors are mounted canted at different angles. The rear motors are canted outboard, whereas the front motors are not. The fronts are instead canted rearward.
View attachment 105935
With the arms folded, you can see how much the rear motors are canted outboard. That means the propeller blades
must cross when nested inboard across the body. New prop blades can only be forced to stow nested together if one side or the other is
forced to bend under/over the other side.
View attachment 105936
The front motors instead are level with each other,
not canted outboard.
View attachment 105937
The front propeller blades can therefor be stowed nested together without imposing any bending stress on the blades.
View attachment 105938