Hermey
Well-Known Member
I'm glad you were able to get your drone fixed. At a good price.
Some thoughts on this:
(1) In general, when flying a drone, as with several other things in life, I think it's best to retain as much manual control over the activity as you can. Hence I would never use RTH just to conclude a flight, but rather would only use it for "emergencies." Any time you go "auto", and let the machine take over, things can happen that you may not have expected.
(2) If you do use RTH or any "automatic" feature on the drone, be sure you understand fully how to use it, before you use it in the field. For instance, go out on a flight training day and just practice using different features of the controller and app. I did this for my RTH training. I went out and flew the drone only 60 ft away, and about 50 ft elevation. Then pressed RTH and noted the drone was ascending quite a bit, at which I realized the RTH altitude probably needed resetting. I cancelled RTH and checked: indeed it did, RTH altitude was over 300 ft, I didn't need it that high. Retested w/ lower height. Once the drone got over the home point, I took over manually and landed it from there.
(3) I also learned how to use the compass and map on the DJI Fly app, so I could navigate home via one of those if I lose sight of the drone and/or am having trouble locating where I am, when I turn the drone around and try to see my own location via its eyes. NOTE: the map apparently will only work where there is cell signal. So it's a good idea to learn to use the compass in case the map is not functional.
(4) Over-reliance on "automatic" features on machines is creating people who are not learning some basic skills they should be learning, in order to do the activity they are doing. For instance, I have a friend who is very poor at directions. When I go hiking with her, she is surprisingly unable to recognize or locate major landmarks. Instead of learning direction better, she says "I am lazy, I usually go with a group, someone else can do it." That's not the right approach. In my view if you are going to do an activity, you should learn the skills that go with it and not be totally reliant on others. Another example of how she's setting herself up for problems: she recently got a car with all wheel drive, thinking this will allow her to easily drive in 4wd conditions. But the car does not have high clearance, and also she has no skill or even experience driving in conditions like snow, soft sand, rough roads with rocks and holes...any 4wd road conditions. She expects that her car will just "magically" switch to AWD and allow her to drive on conditions she has no skill to be driving on. This is a recipe for problems.
Some thoughts on this:
(1) In general, when flying a drone, as with several other things in life, I think it's best to retain as much manual control over the activity as you can. Hence I would never use RTH just to conclude a flight, but rather would only use it for "emergencies." Any time you go "auto", and let the machine take over, things can happen that you may not have expected.
(2) If you do use RTH or any "automatic" feature on the drone, be sure you understand fully how to use it, before you use it in the field. For instance, go out on a flight training day and just practice using different features of the controller and app. I did this for my RTH training. I went out and flew the drone only 60 ft away, and about 50 ft elevation. Then pressed RTH and noted the drone was ascending quite a bit, at which I realized the RTH altitude probably needed resetting. I cancelled RTH and checked: indeed it did, RTH altitude was over 300 ft, I didn't need it that high. Retested w/ lower height. Once the drone got over the home point, I took over manually and landed it from there.
(3) I also learned how to use the compass and map on the DJI Fly app, so I could navigate home via one of those if I lose sight of the drone and/or am having trouble locating where I am, when I turn the drone around and try to see my own location via its eyes. NOTE: the map apparently will only work where there is cell signal. So it's a good idea to learn to use the compass in case the map is not functional.
(4) Over-reliance on "automatic" features on machines is creating people who are not learning some basic skills they should be learning, in order to do the activity they are doing. For instance, I have a friend who is very poor at directions. When I go hiking with her, she is surprisingly unable to recognize or locate major landmarks. Instead of learning direction better, she says "I am lazy, I usually go with a group, someone else can do it." That's not the right approach. In my view if you are going to do an activity, you should learn the skills that go with it and not be totally reliant on others. Another example of how she's setting herself up for problems: she recently got a car with all wheel drive, thinking this will allow her to easily drive in 4wd conditions. But the car does not have high clearance, and also she has no skill or even experience driving in conditions like snow, soft sand, rough roads with rocks and holes...any 4wd road conditions. She expects that her car will just "magically" switch to AWD and allow her to drive on conditions she has no skill to be driving on. This is a recipe for problems.