Hey guys. Not a regular here but I wanted to chime in on my experience today with the Mavic Pro and genuinely provide a warning instead of just complaining.
I lifted off today on a deserted beach in Maui to get some footage of the rocks on the coastline and my dear Mavic decided to just continue into the Abyss of the Pacific.
The gimbal was blown by the wind, so the camera very shortly after take off was facing downwards. At around 20m distance, I had no control anymore over which direction the aircraft was heading, just the altitude. It just continued flying around 4km until I was able to have her just hover and turn around. Return-to-home was able to be activated from the very beginning of this fiasco to no avail.
Transmission strength with the controller was stable and strong for the entire flight and a last ditch attempt to reboot the controller and attach a second phone with the DJI Go app was proved fruitless. I thus had to witness the demise of this drone into the Pacific ocean; something I feel guilty about contributing to polluting.
I'm really not sure if this is a firmware issue, sand inside of a motor, software or a list of other unforeseeable circumstances but we all need to keep an eye out. I'm kind of happy this was over the ocean and not a populated area.
P.s. I wouldn't call myself an experienced UAV pilot, but I do have around 590km of flight distance with this drone.
I lifted off today on a deserted beach in Maui to get some footage of the rocks on the coastline and my dear Mavic decided to just continue into the Abyss of the Pacific.
The gimbal was blown by the wind, so the camera very shortly after take off was facing downwards. At around 20m distance, I had no control anymore over which direction the aircraft was heading, just the altitude. It just continued flying around 4km until I was able to have her just hover and turn around. Return-to-home was able to be activated from the very beginning of this fiasco to no avail.
Transmission strength with the controller was stable and strong for the entire flight and a last ditch attempt to reboot the controller and attach a second phone with the DJI Go app was proved fruitless. I thus had to witness the demise of this drone into the Pacific ocean; something I feel guilty about contributing to polluting.
I'm really not sure if this is a firmware issue, sand inside of a motor, software or a list of other unforeseeable circumstances but we all need to keep an eye out. I'm kind of happy this was over the ocean and not a populated area.
P.s. I wouldn't call myself an experienced UAV pilot, but I do have around 590km of flight distance with this drone.