Hello Bellerophon:
Like others, I'm glad you got your drone back. I'm curious - during the whole loss of control incident did you manipulate the gimbal or did you have it in FPV mode? I ask because the camera obviously tilts quite a bit. I've had my
MA2 in some high wind situations along cliffs (wind warnings, unable to make forward progress, etc.) but the gimbal always stayed remarkably level. PBDawg suggests a temporary propeller issue which seems possible. The only time I've seen my gimbal move about like that was when a bird attacked my drone.
I don't disagree with the previous posts about wind and wind streams in canyons, etc. Just curious if it could have been something else? I think the Mavic drones assume wind effects when the drone doesn't make progress or fly as the motor outputs would move the unit. In other words if the effect of the relative instantaneous power of the 4 motors, GPS and compass inputs would be 10 m/s on a heading of 200 degrees, but the drone only makes 2 m/s on that heading, the software assumes a wind effect. If something else was retarding progress (a bird?) the software might assume a wind effect. Of course it's hard to imagine a bird could retard progress of the drone without nicking the props or scratching the airframe or battery.
I didn't realize my incident was a bird attack until I found marks from the talons on the drone and noticed three props had nicks in their leading edges. The bird never showed on the camera.
Howard Snell