My apologies for the long message. Just wanted to share an experience I had a couple of days ago with my zoom. We had thunderstorms in the area at night and soon after they passed, I decided to take a flight and see if I could catch part of the storm on video from afar. I took off from the exact spot I had taken off from many times before without any issues whatsoever in my driveway about 30 feet from a metal pole barn. I never take off without a home point established and GPS working which it was this time. As soon as everything looked good I took off and hovered about 5 feet, turned off the landing lights then she took off right into the pole barn. I don't know how it happened but the only thing that seemed to get broke was the propellers. Anyways, after spending the rest of the night running tests to make sure everything else was ok (what a freakin relief), I also discovered I had magnetic interference from a launch point that I had taken off from at least 50 times before without any issues. So, my point of this long windy message is to be careful when taking off directly after a storm because from what I can deduce, the residual electricity in the air coupled with the extreme moisture made a previously safe take off point not safe under certain circumstances and caused magnetic interference which crashed my drone. I learned a good lesson from this.