Well Thank You, I really like wide camera vision and sense of speed, banking on turns... but it has some limitations - lack of gimble shakes the picture on stoping and descending and do not allow You to look down - o how I missed this on this particular flight that's why I was about to buy M3 - but it was not available in the stores so fpv will doAlex, you’re really making me want to go out and purchase a DJI FPV setup !
The goggles would really come in handy for other digital FPV drones too.
I’d like to get into that one day, away from consumer cinematic drones.
You are really getting the hang of it now.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but is that one take ??!!
If so that’s outstanding.
Even the pro (real) FPV drone cinematic YouTube pilots don’t do that.
And it’s hard to keep it interesting in one take for any of us.
You did that.
Well done
Well Thank You, I really like wide camera vision and sense of speed, banking on turns... but it has some limitations - lack of gimble shakes the picture on stoping and descending and do not allow You to look down - o how I missed this on this particular flight that's why I was about to buy M3 - but it was not available in the stores so fpv will do
I guess everything works in M mode but after several attempts, I decided to use only S and am happy with it - M gives You better control But You need to change Your muscle memory reflexes and I don't want that after so many years of building regular oneYes, the usual gimbal would be hard to do without, but I suppose you fly to capture what you want, and when you see the general PFV cinematic videos done with the various action cams, especially the stabilised cams, wow, it can be smooth.
A lot of flight practice needed, yes.
What flight mode did you use there, N or S mode ? (Guessing S)
What's the failsafe RTH like for loss of signal, say if you went too low down to the falls and lost signal ?
Edit - does failsafe and / or low battery RTH work in M mode ??