jrudge
Well-Known Member
Great idea with floats. Will now try and figure how much a care package is!
Actually, P, none of the avoidance sensors would be able to pick out a boat's shrouds.
So sensors wouldn't have helped in that case.


Out of idle curiosity, did you possibly refit/change the settee arrangement on the flybridge?
In some other F165 that I've seen, I don't think there were those facing seats on port side.
ThanksAnyway, FWIW, this is a short video that I made this summer in the marina...
...before someone else crashed the Mini on the big sailboat, that is!
good points, another important reason to stick to under 250g then!
Thats a neat idea.With regards to the care package...you have to be able to give them back the drone...so I bought the care package and these:
View attachment 102588
Effects the stability a bit and not great to land in water.....but
A: Better than fair chance of recovering the drone.
B: Makes a great handle to catch the drone on a moving boat.
Shot the following video of my friends trader...with floats attached:
The online/test course is easy.Another pain in the a$$ for 250g-900g is that you must complete online training and pass an online theory test - not difficult but required. ? ... for over 900g - basically Phantoms etc, you also need to take a written exam at an authorised CAA training facility. ?
Thats a neat idea.
But I think you would need the care package as well.
When my Mavic Pro went in, we recovered it within seconds but the water damaged it immediately.
I'm sure that those floats would work but the drone would almost certainly get wet or even flip over.
That said, as a handle to grab it - sounds good.
BTW
Catching any of the DJI drones.
Apparently, if you just grab it and turn it upside down (in one movement), it switches its motors off.
It requires some confidence - I've only done that once - didn't hurt either.
One last comment about my Mavic Mini.
It regularly complains of a motor problem - always its port aft prop (you can tell - because it "twitches" that prop after it has landed).
I'm sure that those particular props are getting bent in the case - if I change those props it is fine for a while - then it complains again after it has been back in the case for a while.
I think that the case might need some editing!!
Anyone else with the same problem?
My kids have drones (£50/£80).
I would not trust myself with an expensive one. How much easier are they to fly ? They have a lot of automation etc.
blimey you consider that half full???
?
Ok, I agree all that.
Otoh, there are other drones that you can't "fly into something", because their onboard sensors prevent that from happening, automatically.
Which imho is a very convenient feature, particularly for beginners but not only.
My guess is that sooner or later they will find a way to squeeze those sensors in a 250g drone.
But not yet on the Mini 2, based on what I read.
The resolution on the drone footage is amazing. Pin sharp!Actually, P, none of the avoidance sensors would be able to pick out a boat's shrouds.
So sensors wouldn't have helped in that case.
I have had a few drones in my time - and lost some as well!!
I have the original Mavic Mini which IS dead easy to fly.
It flies without GPS as well - indoors for example.
You just take off and it will hover without moving unless you move one of the joysticks - it is that simple.
The Mavic Mini is as good as any of the others because, I can just throw it into a case and head off somewhere on holiday.
I have the "fly more" combo which has a small case with everything inside it.
Just like cameras, the best one is the one that you have with you.
The results from this little drone (even with the lower resolution camera) are really great.
I've flown it out of range several times and it has returned on its own so the new one with the better Ocusync feature will be a real bonus.
A small drone that can fly as far as my Mavic Pro - should be great.
That said, I won't be upgrading to the Mini 2 because the best results are taken much closer up than you would think.
Think of it more like a remote "selfie" camera.
It needs to be quite close to get useful images.
Here is a video made with the Mavic Mini (old one)
It is about the only boating drone video that I took this year!!!
EDIT
When you run this video - click the little square to go full screen.
And then click the little red cog and select the highest resolution.
I think you will be impressed.
And this is a photo taken using the same drone.
The image size has been reduced so that it will upload to this forum's stupid photo uploader.
But, I think you will agree that even with its 2.7K camera, it is perfectly acceptable.
Especially for a drone that you can sling in your case when yo go away.
View attachment 102586
Interesting. Just FYI, this is the alternative layout that I've seen on a couple of sisterships of your boat.Nope, all original - however the forward settee can be rotated to face forwards or aft. I suspect some second owners didn't realise this was possible
WHat are peoples views on whether the fly more kit for the mini/mini2 is worth having? Do you often use more than one battery in a session etc?
If you want this one it is the DJI Mavic Air 2 you would get. I have that one also and it is amazing and does indeed have sensors which can be a pain when landing on a boat. The MA2 is about £950.
The Mini 2 has no sensors so you fly it. If you are sensible you will not fly into an obstacle any more than you would walk into a wall or similar
Do you still have a link to those stiffer props?Yes ....bent DJI props happened to my Mavic Mini on a number of occasions. After some research, I bought some Chinese replacements - was very nervous about trying them, but they are a bit stiffer and worked a treat. Never had another motor error.