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After reading all the storys about fly aways. what do you all think the reasons are for these mishaps? and what can 1 do to put the odds in his or her favor of this not happening?
After reading all the storys about fly aways. what do you all think the reasons are for these mishaps? and what can 1 do to put the odds in his or her favor of this not happening?
I had a similar experience but I just flipped the switch back to P-GPS mode and all was well.And, learn to fly in ATT mode. I thought I was quite competent in ATT, until last night, there was a mild wind, or breeze at home point, flew for 10 minutes & then, with bird at 40m.just above to my right, switched to ATT, OMG! I thought I had the dreaded Fly-away! She veered left at a hi rate of speed & It took all I knew to stablilze, heading her back to me I was at 3/4 throttle & fighting against left turns, real eye opener for me,
After landing I was soaked & breathing like a marathon jogger!
I can understand, why a UAV-er with limited fly time, could think they are expierencing a Flyway
As mentioned above, the P3 is remarkably free of genuine flyaways.After reading all the storys about fly aways. what do you all think the reasons are for these mishaps? and what can 1 do to put the odds in his or her favor of this not happening?
And, sadly, it seems we're heading back to those times since DJI has a recent desire to encrypt all of the flight logsBefore the P3 series there was no way to know what caused many post Phantoms and the myth of the flyaway began.
Yes .. it's a big step backwards.And, sadly, it seems we're heading back to those times since DJI has a recent desire to encrypt all of the flight logs
I emailed them about this and they said they don't want anyone but their data analysis team to be able to view the logs.I think keeping things transparent had to be better for DJI than locking up flight data.
Hmm ... I'd hoped that wasn't the case, I can't see how it benefits them.I emailed them about this and they said they don't want anyone but their data analysis team to be able to view the logs.
I don't think so. I have a feeling that DJI might not want customers to know that much information about their crashes. Perhaps it's somehow costing DJI a lot of money.Was there anything visible in the flight records that could have given competitors insight into their systems?
A few members here have reached out to @EranSteiner (the developer of Healthy Drones), but he decided to ignore us for some reason. Whatever he has done to get around the new log encryption has not been approved by DJI. I have a feeling that Healthy Drones won't be around for too much longer, so everyone should enjoy it while it lasts.HealthyDrones can still read the data so their secret isn't secure.
That seems quite misguided of them.I don't think so. I have a feeling that DJI might not want customers to know that much information about their crashes. Perhaps it's somehow costing DJI a lot of money.