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Potential Prop Defect/Issue?

MrChris

Active Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2019
Messages
35
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Age
54
Location
Seattle, WA
I happened to experience a pretty serious crash with my previous drone from another manufacturer. Rose about a foot off the ground and hurled itself at a fence without touching the sticks. Despite having a sister site to this one for that brand of aircraft and the experts there review the log files, clearly showing an uncommanded crash, the manufacturer refused to help in any way with the repair. Between the accident itself and the resulting lack of concern I abandoned that bird, and bought a Mavic 2 Pro.

So far it has been flawless for me and I've been more than happy. But seeing some of the recent threads on M2 crashes sits in the back of my mind and thankfully means taking extra caution when flying to try and mitigate pilot caused crashes.

I always check my props for nicks and cracks before each flight. However yesterday I spent a little more time going over them and noticed on one motor the blades flexed easily whereas the other 3 were quite stiff. I don't have a way to test definitively but if I had to guess they were about 20% as stiff as the other 3. No cracks and there have been zero impacts with any objects. Without trying to put much pressure on the good ones, I couldn't bend them easily, the soft ones flexed considerably with minimal effort. The props had maybe 30 flights and a total of 5 hours of flight time. I know there is some discussion out there about how often to replace with some doing it more frequently and others only when showing damage. I replaced the more flexible one with a new one.

Some of the threads where there was speculation of props coming apart, unseen bird strike, etc. Like this one Mavic 2 Pro Crashed into the sea without apparent reason

Given in my case all 4 props were the original ones that came with the bird, all had the same flight time under the same conditions, I'm wondering if there wasn't a batch of them with a manufacturing defect, slightly different materials, something that caused this prop to feel so much weaker than the others. Maybe that flexibility doesn't translate to any actual failure and I'm completely wrong, pure speculation on my part based on this observation. Maybe a wide variation in flexibility of the individual blades is normal. But it seems in the few short months I've had my Mavic 2 that I've seen at least several threads where it seems a prop loss was the cause of the crash with no cause for the loss of the prop.

If nothing else I'm going to continue paying extra close attention to their condition and replacing frequently. Props are cheap enough that there is no point trying to milk an extra flight out of them. I do wonder if anyone else has noticed something similar?

Clearly replacing when damaged is a good idea but I'm thinking those that suggest frequent replacement after say 20 or so hours of use are on to something.
 
I happened to experience a pretty serious crash with my previous drone from another manufacturer. Rose about a foot off the ground and hurled itself at a fence without touching the sticks. Despite having a sister site to this one for that brand of aircraft and the experts there review the log files, clearly showing an uncommanded crash, the manufacturer refused to help in any way with the repair. Between the accident itself and the resulting lack of concern I abandoned that bird, and bought a Mavic 2 Pro.

So far it has been flawless for me and I've been more than happy. But seeing some of the recent threads on M2 crashes sits in the back of my mind and thankfully means taking extra caution when flying to try and mitigate pilot caused crashes.

I always check my props for nicks and cracks before each flight. However yesterday I spent a little more time going over them and noticed on one motor the blades flexed easily whereas the other 3 were quite stiff. I don't have a way to test definitively but if I had to guess they were about 20% as stiff as the other 3. No cracks and there have been zero impacts with any objects. Without trying to put much pressure on the good ones, I couldn't bend them easily, the soft ones flexed considerably with minimal effort. The props had maybe 30 flights and a total of 5 hours of flight time. I know there is some discussion out there about how often to replace with some doing it more frequently and others only when showing damage. I replaced the more flexible one with a new one.

Some of the threads where there was speculation of props coming apart, unseen bird strike, etc. Like this one Mavic 2 Pro Crashed into the sea without apparent reason

Given in my case all 4 props were the original ones that came with the bird, all had the same flight time under the same conditions, I'm wondering if there wasn't a batch of them with a manufacturing defect, slightly different materials, something that caused this prop to feel so much weaker than the others. Maybe that flexibility doesn't translate to any actual failure and I'm completely wrong, pure speculation on my part based on this observation. Maybe a wide variation in flexibility of the individual blades is normal. But it seems in the few short months I've had my Mavic 2 that I've seen at least several threads where it seems a prop loss was the cause of the crash with no cause for the loss of the prop.

If nothing else I'm going to continue paying extra close attention to their condition and replacing frequently. Props are cheap enough that there is no point trying to milk an extra flight out of them. I do wonder if anyone else has noticed something similar?

Clearly replacing when damaged is a good idea but I'm thinking those that suggest frequent replacement after say 20 or so hours of use are on to something.
Check the props before every flight by running your fingers across the leading and trailing edges and replace if you can feel any nicks on them. Fun fact the props almost always break from the tailing edge (probably cause it’s thinner.) Other than that don’t worry about it. M2 has exceptional stock props.

Almost all crashes are due to pilot error and people don’t usually post about the flawless flight they had, usually when we hear about it it’s because something went wrong.
 
Check the props before every flight by running your fingers across the leading and trailing edges and replace if you can feel any nicks on them. Fun fact the props almost always break from the tailing edge (probably cause it’s thinner.) Other than that don’t worry about it. M2 has exceptional stock props.

Almost all crashes are due to pilot error and people don’t usually post about the flawless flight they had, usually when we hear about it it’s because something went wrong.
Hi. I have had my bird since March and no problems with it but living in Cornwall no flying until next March or April due to the weather we have down here. But having read all the forum's I have never figured out if everyone is going to have a crash at some time because as these things go wrong a crash is inevitable or as we get used to them we all make mistakes with them and thus cause a crash.
 
I had non DJI props on my M2Z come apart in mid flight. One just completely disintegrated. Bird went straight down. Too bad three motors can’t sustain it for a short time.
 
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