Haven't seen specs on the new remote, specifically brightness. Assume 700 nit again. The additional external antennas seems the biggest difference from original.
Saw the spec at 700 nits.Haven't seen specs on the new remote, specifically brightness. Assume 700 nit again. The additional external antennas seems the biggest difference from original.
Yes, 100%. Guaranteed.The question is: will it work with older drones like the original Mavic 3?
Hoping you are right! I would enjoy having better signal after 1.5 kms (~1 mile) as the original DJI RC starts to struggle at that point.Yes, 100%. Guaranteed.
I say that on the basis of no information from anywhere at all.
And I'm certain of it.
Right, just found the FAQ for the RC 2: DJI - Official Website.Go to DJI store look up controller and check compatibility.
Hope this helps
Oman
Everything about this new RC screams, "oops!" about the first one. The DJI RC will be flushed out of the system, so to speak, completely replaced by this new one.Hoping you are right! I would enjoy having better signal after 1.5 kms (~1 mile) as the original DJI RC starts to struggle at that point.
100% and I wouldn't be surprised if additional stocks of RC were being rounded up to go back and be reworked. My guess is RC will soon ghost just like the Mavic 3.Everything about this new RC screams, "oops!" about the first one. The DJI RC will be flushed out of the system, so to speak, completely replaced by this new one.
Notice that the DJI RC 2 addresses the three main problems that caused issues with the first version: Poor signal reach (added external antennas), flight logs filling up storage (8GB raised to 32GB), and video stuttering and other performance issues (faster CPU).
Bye bye DJI RC.
Will I be upgrading? No. Haven't had any of those issues in my use of the DJI RC for the Mini3P and A2S.
You could very easily be right and I really do hope they will all be compatible at some point but I'm not holding my breath on this one.No. of transmission antennas and receivers doesn't affect compatibility directly. Look at current controllers. Rc pro already has 2T4R with O3. Frequency ranges are the same apart from the addition of the 5.1Ghz frequency band(s) which can be ignored in O3 mode
You means like setting the trend for the multi-cameras? Or including waypoints in a consumer level drone? Oh, battery loading from the rear? Compatibility with a smart controller or screen RC? Any other trends Air lineup is setting? Air 3 with O4 is strictly timing. We'll never see an Air 4.With the "Apple of Drones" production DJI seems to have embraced, I could see them going with RC2 works with new drones-only, but realistically, I would be surprised if they don't make it backwards compatible with all the latest 3 models.
Funny how the Air seems to be their trendsetter again.
Well, I'll ask that you trust an engineer that has written firmware for Software Defined Radio systems for this sort of thing... The hardware changes required by O4 (additional antennas, frequencies, etc.) are no obstacle to programming forward compatibility. It might mean less range, but not impossible to engineer.Based on what I have read on DJI'S website, the new RC2 and RC N2 are only compatible with the Air 3 and no other aircraft.
Ocusync 4 is a totally new transmission system utilizing 3 different frequency ranges, with 2 transmission antennas and 4 receiving antennas and is not in any way compatible with other systems.
The RC, RC-Pro, and any of the FPV Goggles and motion controllers are not compatible with the Air 3.
My understanding is that the new O4 is just too different at the hardware level to allow any backwards compatibility with anything else.
Time will tell but I believe the Air 3 aircraft and RC is a new separate line and will never allow any compatibility with the current existing aircrafts and RC's, not even with FW updates.
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