DJI signature technologies such as Obstacle Sensing and Intelligent Flight Modes like HyperLapse, ActiveTrackTM 2.0, QuickShot, Panorama, and Advanced Pilot Assistance Systems, help you capture complex shots effortlessly. The Mavic 2 Pro boasts a maximum flight speed of 44.7 mph (72 kph) and a maximum flight time** of 31 minutes. 13 14 19 18 16
DJI - Mavic 3 Pro Cine Premium Combo Drone and RC Pro Remote Control with Built-in Screen - Gray. Model: CP.MA.00000664.01. SKU: 6542766. (7) Compare. $4,799.99. Shop for dji mavic 2 pro at Best Buy. Find low everyday prices and buy online for delivery or in-store pick-up.
The maximum flight time of the Mavic Pro Platinum is extended to 30 minutes and the sound pressure level is reduced by 4 dB when it is within 1 m between the aircraft. 9. Does the maximum flight speed increase with the advanced Mavic Pro Platinum's propulsion system?
The DJI Mavic 3 Pro is $2,199/âŹ2,099 with the DJI RC controller, the Fly More Combo with the RC controller is $2,999/âŹ2,799, and the Fly More Combo with the RD Pro controller is $3,899/âŹ3,499.
. DJI har slĂ€ppt tvĂ„ nya drönare Mavic 2 Zoom och Mavic 2 Pro. Dessa drönare ser ungefĂ€r likadana ut men skiljer sig pĂ„ sĂ„ sĂ€tt att Mavic 2 Pro Ă€r lite dyrare och har en Hasselblad kamera medans Mavic 2 Zoom har en 2X optisk bild zoom. BĂ„da dessa drönare har en saftig prislapp men Ă€r drönare av absolut toppklass. DJI Mavic 2 Zoom och Mavic 2 Pro Ă€r smĂ„ och portabla, och skiljer inte utseendemĂ€ssigt nĂ€mnvĂ€rt frĂ„n sina föregĂ„ngare men har förbĂ€ttrats avsevĂ€rt i prestanda och och recension av DJI Mavic 2 Pro och ZoomVi tĂ€nkte gĂ„ in nĂ€rmare pĂ„ det som skiljer Mavic 2 Pro frĂ„n Mavic 2 Zoom nĂ€mligen kameran. Mavic 2 Pro har en Hasselblad kamera och Ă€r perfekt för dig som vill ta bilder i toppklass medans Mavic 2 Zoom har en kamera med zoom funktion. Zoom funktionen lĂ„ter dig ta nĂ€rbilder frĂ„n lĂ„ngt avstĂ„nd vilket kan vara bra i mĂ„nga med zoomUtmĂ€rkande för Mavic 2 Zoom Ă€r som namnet antyder dess zoom funktion. Det nya zoom systemet gör det möjligt att zooma in pĂ„ objekt och filma nĂ€rmare Ă€ven om drönare har samma avstĂ„nd. Det kan vara att föredra om man vill ha tystare filmning utan störande ljud frĂ„n omrĂ„det eller om man har svĂ„rt att flyga nĂ€rmare objektet. NĂ€r man zoomar in pĂ„ ett objekt kan man fĂ„ en hĂ€ftig suddig skrollar pĂ„ ett hjul med höger fingret för att zooma in och ut samtidigt som man kan scrolla med vĂ€nsterfingret för att höja och sĂ€nka kameran. Det gĂ„r vĂ€ldigt smidigt och kĂ€nns helt naturligt nĂ€r man vĂ€l har fĂ„tt grepp om det. Man kan Ă€ven göra en âDolly Zoomâ dĂ€r man flyger baklĂ€nges och samtidigt zoomar in vilket fĂ„r det att verka som objektet stĂ„r kvar pĂ„ samma plats samtidigt som bakgrunden rör sig. Med Mavic 2 Zoom gĂ„r det att zooma 2x med optisk zoom och 4x med digital zoomning men dĂ„ sjunker upplösningen frĂ„n 4K till filmar i 4K 30fps i D-Cinelike i 100 mbp/s eller 2,7K i upp till 60fps. Det finns Ă€ven möjlighet att filma med full HD 1080p i upp till 120fps vilket innebĂ€r att man efterĂ„t kan dra ner filmen i annan hĂ€ftig funktion Ă€r att man kan göra sĂ„ kallade timelaps videos som blir allt mer populĂ€rt. Man slipper redigera filmen i efterhand, det Ă€r bara att trycka pĂ„ en knapp. Man stĂ€ller in drönaren att flyga frĂ„n en punkt till en annan, cirkulera objektet eller ta kontrollen sjĂ€lv, dĂ„ stĂ€ller man in drönaren pĂ„ cruise kontroll för att fĂ„ en stadig och jĂ€mn videos tar en bild varannan sekund och det tar ungefĂ€r fem minuter att fĂ„ 100-150 bilder vilket Ă€r lagom för en bra video. Resultatet Ă€r riktigt med HasselbladskameraMavic 2 Pro kommer med en inbyggd hasselbladskamera vilket gör drönaren nĂ„got dyrare Ă€n Mavic 2 Zoom. Bild och filmkvaliten pĂ„ denna kameran med 3-axlad videostabilisering Ă€r helt enkelt fantastisk och det gĂ„r inte att bli besviken oavsett hur krĂ€sen man Ă€r. Detta Ă€r en drönare för professionella fotografer och filmare som vill ha videokvalitet i LibraryDenna funktion gör det möjligt att spara en flygrutt som gjort tidigare sĂ„ att drönaren flyger pĂ„ samma sĂ€tt igen. DĂ„ kan du filma samma miljö under olika tider pĂ„ dygnet eller under andra vĂ€derförhĂ„llanden, vilket kan ge en cool dig inte bara följa ett objekt utan drönaren kan lista ut ungefĂ€r vart objektet kommer att ta vĂ€gen eller dyka upp om det skulle förvinna ur synfĂ€ltet. Mavic 2 kan Ă€ven undvika och navigera runt hinder samtidigt som den följer efter ett och enkel flygningMavic 2 har massor med funktioner och avancerade instĂ€llningar som det kan vara svĂ„rt att sĂ€tta sig in i som nybörjare men drönaren Ă€r förvĂ„ningsvĂ€rt enkel att flyga. Den har vĂ€ldigt imponerande stabilitet och det gĂ„r snabbt att vĂ€nja sig vid kontrollen Ă€ven om man inte Ă€r van att flyga. Med standard instĂ€llningen sĂ„ Ă€r alla drönarens sĂ€kerhetsinstĂ€llningar pĂ„ vilket innebĂ€r att Mavic 2 vĂ€grar att flyga in i nĂ„got. Sensorerna finns runt om hela drönaren som varnar nĂ€r ett hinder kommer för man in drönaren pĂ„ sportlĂ€ge sĂ„ gĂ„r det snabbare och man kan flyga nĂ€rmare objekt om man vill. Det Ă€r inte lika sĂ€kert men vĂ€ldigt roligt att köra snabbt och göra hĂ€ftiga batteritidFlygtiden Ă€r hela 30 min vilket Ă€r vĂ€ldigt bra för en sĂ„ liten Mavic 2 â OmdömeDJI Mavic 2 Ă€r en dyr drönare i toppklass med mĂ„nga avancerade funktioner som kan vara svĂ„rt att sĂ€tta sig in i om man Ă€r nybörjare. Men detta Ă€r en vĂ€ldigt kapabel drönare och man fĂ„r mycket för Ă€r snygg och behĂ€ndig, det Ă€r lĂ€tt att vika ihop drönaren och ta med den i en ryggsĂ€ck pĂ„ resor och finns tillrĂ€ckligt med funktioner för att fĂ„ Ă€ven den mest krĂ€sne drönarfantasten nöjd. Den nya zoom funktionen pĂ„ Mavic 2 Zoom ger nya möjligheter som tidigare inte varit möjligt och DJI Mavic 2 Pro har en hasselbladskamera som ger bildkvalitet i absolut fĂ„r inte en bĂ€ttre drönare i den hĂ€r portabla storleken och i den hĂ€r prisklassen. FrĂ„gan Ă€r bara om man vĂ€rderar zoom funktionen som DJI Mavic 2 Zoom har eller om man hellre vill ha DJI Mavic 2 Pro med Hasselblads Drönaren sĂ€ljs inte lĂ€ngre â Se alternativSe Ă€ven bĂ€sta drönaren med kamera 2022!
#21 No, not really since the drone has been out for like 3 days.. and there are not that many out there, considering shipping times are weeks or months. Many of the reviewers that DJI sent out beta units to probably are not going to jump on long range flights.. someone will probably do it eventually.. Some of the YouTube reviewers have had the mini 3 pro for months. Just search on YouTube. I've seen at least 20 to 30 reviews. No range test though. #22 Likely because all the early recipients know they need to be careful and can't see to be breaking the law by doing such tests. They'll have a list of terms and conditions and expected standards to sign up do before they get their drone. #23 Wow. really sucks. My old mini 1 could do better than that. #24 Another test confirms issue with weak signal at 1,5 km shame I won't buy it #25 Some of the YouTube reviewers have had the mini 3 pro for months. Just search on YouTube. I've seen at least 20 to 30 reviews. No range test though. I am well aware of how long some reviewers have had the Mini 3.. Most of those are probably not going to do some sort of long range distance test for various reasons.. They are starting to show up of course, and it will take more than one channel's distance test to get a feel for the effective range of the Mini 3, and it will probably vary depending on whether your using the DJI RC or the RC-N1 controller. So the tester should have both and use both to compare. I suspect the DJI RC will not have the same range as the RC-N1.. But for most flights, I think the potential convenience of having the DJI RC will have enough range to get the job done. #26 Appauling range from mini 3 Appalling or appealing? As DJI is going safe with the 249 g design I might bet, they also intentionally lowered the range by incorporating the anntenae into the body. There are way too many people just not obeying the rules and/or throw common sense into the bin beyond a reasonable VLOS. And lower range is not the same as signal strength or quality of connection which might be still without a hitch. I guess, we have to wait a bit more for more tests and some ironed out bugs in the firmware. #27 Another test confirms issue with weak signal at 1,5 km shame I won't buy it If all you're concerned about is how far beyond VLOS you can fly. then you will need other options probably, however , its going to take more testing than one YT channel I think to determine the reasonable range of the Mini 3. #28 If all you're concerned about is how far beyond VLOS you can fly. then you will need other options probably, however , its going to take more testing than one YT channel I think to determine the reasonable range of the Mini 3. Signal Transmission Ranges (FCC) [6]â Strong Interference (urban landscape): Approx. km Medium Interference (suburban landscape): Approx. 3-7 km Low Interference (suburb/seaside): Approx. 7-12 km According to specs about it should be more then enough..like Mini 2 maybe the problem only exists with DJI controller not with N1 controller We will wait and see furthers tests. If i have to look for other options , then i regretted selling my mavic pro 1 #29 Signal Transmission Ranges (FCC) [6]â Strong Interference (urban landscape): Approx. km Medium Interference (suburban landscape): Approx. 3-7 km Low Interference (suburb/seaside): Approx. 7-12 km According to specs about it shoud be more then enough maybe the problem only exists with DJI controller not with N1 controller We will wait and see furthers test . If i have to look for other options , then i regret selling my mavic pro 1 It still boils down to, how far do you really need to fly? Sure your old Mavic Pro was a good drone, an aging one, but a good one.. Every model has strengths and weaknesses... I think I would prefer a drone that does great photography and doesn't need to fly 2-4-5, ,more KM or MI, beyond ones ability to see it, let alone recover, if something goes wrong. I think the Mini 3 Pro based on what I've seen does a great job in low light, overall video, and photos... An Air 2s may still be a little bit better, but its close, even in comparisons to the Mavic 3, I think the Mini 3 compares relatively well in that regard... #30 It still boils down to, how far do you really need to fly? Sure your old Mavic Pro was a good drone, an aging one, but a good one.. Every model has strengths and weaknesses... I think I would prefer a drone that does great photography and doesn't need to fly 2-4-5, ,more KM or MI, beyond ones ability to see it, let alone recover, if something goes wrong. I think the Mini 3 Pro based on what I've seen does a great job in low light, overall video, and photos... An Air 2s may still be a little bit better, but its close, even in comparisons to the Mavic 3, I think the Mini 3 compares relatively well in that regard... I mean the range test is very poor compared to mini 2 . i like to fly long range distances far away from cities and people in the landscape. When DJI wrote 7-12km max , it must have exactly this performance Otherwise i don't want spent 800 $ for something like fake drone #31 I mean the range test is very poor compared to mini 2 . i like to fly long range distances far away from cities and people in the landscape. When DJI wrote 7-12km max , it must have exactly this performance Otherwise i don't want spent 800 $ for something like fake drone DJI reports things based on optimal conditions which are not always really achievable in reality for a host of reasons. If you like to fly long range and get into potential trouble for flying beyond VLOS, thats your call.. However I think the jury is still out and there are probably more software updates coming that may optimize things., time will tell.. You say you don't want to spend $800 for a fake drone, but you'll spend $500-600 for the Mini 2, with far less optimal video and photo capability. So I guess your far more worried about range than what the drone is intended for.. Guess we'll see how it goes, course now were maybe waiting for the Air 3 or the Air 3s.. or whatever is next and what will it do better? ... there are just certain limitations for every model, the actual range of most of them is about the same if your a safe pilot., however, , some models are better than others, and perhaps the new RC has limits because of its design, or a software update will come along and it will improve. Time will tell. #32 I guess, we have to wait a bit more for more tests and some ironed out bugs in the firmware. What firmware bugs have been identified? #33 Philip Bloom states in his review (which is really worth the time, it is very different to your standard drone review) that he did not observe much difference in range between the DJI RC and the RC-N1. This is written on-screen from about 35:16 in his review: I guess that could mean the somewhat limited range (as of now, at least) is down to the drone itself, more than the controller. #34 I think drone flyers are interested in the longest distance capability, just for the heck of it .... but on the practical side...,, I think a short-range capability more likely implies risk of interference or broken signals in short distances. That is worrisome. Especially, for that price range and with compeitition from other brands (autel). #35 What firmware bugs have been identified? Coming from some of the reviews, there have been reports of the drone dropping altitude in forward/rear flight, slightly but constantly. There are always bugs (not necessarily severe) and I guess we will likely hear of some when the Mini 3 Pro really hits the shelfs. #36 Anyone seen this one? But I don't understand the language. At 4:10, it seems to indicate it reached 5km?? not sure what controller he was using at the time and the height (around 3km????) Last edited: May 17, 2022 #38 Once i get hold of ours ill do some EVLOS testing. The issue i have is that my EVLOS rating lets me fly outbto 80% of the links range. Without testing to the limit, its hard to list 80% of that limit in our documentation. I may be able to use the DJI listed specs for initial testing #39 Anyone seen this one? But I don't understand the language. At 4:10, it seems to indicate it reached 5km?? not sure what controller he was using at the time and the height (around 3km????) I kind of understood some of what he was saying, both controllers about equal no difference. Only he mentions second controller has less bars (signal strength) beyond 5000 meters but still good signal as first controller. From what I was seeing, second test did show less bars at 5000 meters plus compared to first test at 5700 meters, but as he turned the drone around for return bars increased. My view, Was a close comparison with both controllers. Could have gone either way, maybe a slight improvement on signal on his first flight test. I still didnât catch which controller he was using for each test though, Iâll need to watch the entire video, only watched a small portion here and there. Overall, both test were good. #40 Anyone seen this one? But I don't understand the language. At 4:10, it seems to indicate it reached 5km?? not sure what controller he was using at the time and the height (around 3km????) Tested at almost 3000m altitude (the limit for the large batteries) 1st test, standard battery and DJI RC: 5830m (battery limit) 2nd test, large battery and standard controller: 5319m (signal limit, and still 45% battery left when landed) He could have gone a bit further, but he didn't want to risk too much. He says both controllers started to have poor signal at the same distance. It is interesting that in the second flight the drone was moving sideways (instead of straight forward) for no reason, so he switched of "lateral flight" option, and then it was fine.
Mavic 2 Pro & Mavic 2 ZoomMavic 2 Pro CameraSensor1â CMOS Effective Pixels: 20 millionLensFOV: about 77° 35 mm Format Equivalent: 28 mm Aperture: f/ Shooting Range: 1 m to âISO RangeVideo: 100-6400 Photo: 100-3200 (auto) 100-12800 (manual)Shutter SpeedElectronic Shutter: 8â1/8000sStill Image Size5472Ă3648Still Photography ModesSingle shot Burst shooting: 3/5 frames Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB): 3/5 bracketed frames at EV Bias Interval (JPEG: 2/3/5/7/10/15/20/30/60s RAW:5/7/10/15/20/30/60s)Video Resolution4K: 3840Ă2160 24/25/30p 2688x1512 24/25/30/48/50/60p FHD: 1920Ă1080 24/25/30/48/50/60/120p Max Video Bitrate100MbpsColor ModeDlog-M (10bit), support HDR video (HLG 10bit)Supported File SystemFAT32 (†32 GB) exFAT (> 32 GB)Photo FormatJPEG / DNG (RAW)Video FormatMP4 / MOV (MPEG-4 AVC/ HEVC/ WeightMavic 2 Pro: 907 g Mavic 2 Zoom: 905gDimensionsFolded: 214Ă91Ă84 mm (lengthĂwidthĂheight) Unfolded: 322Ă242Ă84 mm (lengthĂwidthĂheight)Diagonal Distance354 mmMax Ascent Speed5 m/s (S-mode) 4 m/s (P-mode)Max Descent Speed3 m/s (S-mode) 3 m/s (P-mode) Max Speed (near sea level, no wind)72 kph (S-mode)Maximum Takeoff Altitude6000 mMax Flight Time (no wind)31 minutes (at a consistent 25 kph)Max Hovering Time (no wind)29 minutesMax Flight Distance (no wind)18 km (at a consistent 50 kph)Max Wind Speed Resistance29â38 kphMax Tilt Angle35° (S-mode, with remote controller) 25° (P-mode)Max Angular Velocity200°/sOperating Temperature Range-10°C to 40°COperating - GHz - GHzTransmission Power (EIRP) - GHz FCCïŒâ€26 dBm CEïŒâ€20 dBm SRRCïŒâ€20 dBm MICïŒâ€20 dBm GHz FCCïŒâ€26 dBm CEïŒâ€14 dBm SRRCïŒâ€26 dBmGNSSGPS+GLONASSHovering Accuracy RangeVertical: ± m (when vision positioning is active) ± m (with GPS positioning) Horizontal: ± m (when vision positioning is active) ± m (with GPS positioning)Internal Storage8 GBSensing SystemSensing SystemOmnidirectional Obstacle Sensing1ForwardPrecision Measurement Range: - 20 m Detectable Range: 20 - 40 m Effective Sensing Speed: †14m/s FOV: Horizontal: 40°, Vertical: 70°BackwardPrecision Measurement Range: - 16 m Detectable Range: 16 - 32 m Effective Sensing Speed: †12m/s FOV: Horizontal: 60°, Vertical: 77°UpwardPrecision Measurement Range: - 8 mDownwardPrecision Measurement Range: - 11 m Detectable Range: 11 - 22 m SidesPrecision Measurement Range: - 10 m Effective Sensing Speed: †8m/s FOV: Horizontal: 80°, Vertical: 65°Operating EnvironmentForward, Backward and Sides: Surface with clear pattern and adequate lighting (lux > 15) Upward: Detects diffuse reflective surfaces (>20%) (walls, trees, people, etc.) Downward: Surface with clear pattern and adequate lighting (lux > 15) Detects diffuse reflective surfaces (>20%) (walls, trees, people, etc.)ChargerInput100-240 V, 50/60 Hz, V â A or V â A USB: 5 Vâ2 A ± VRated Power60 WAPPVideo Transmission SystemOcuSync GO 4Live View QualityRemote Controller: 720p@30fps / 1080p@30fps DJI Goggles: 720p@30fps / 1080p@30fps DJI Goggles RE: 720p@30fps / 1080p@30fpsLatency (depending on environmental conditions and mobile device)120 - 130 msMax Live View Bitrate12MbpsMavic 2 Zoom CameraSensor1/ CMOSEffective Pixels: 12 millionLensFOV: about 83° (24 mm); about 48° (48 mmïŒ 35 mm Format Equivalent: 24-48 mm Aperture: f/ (24 mm)âf/ (48 mm) Shooting Range: m to âISO RangeVideo: 100-3200 Photo: 100-1600 (auto) 100-3200 (manual)Shutter SpeedElectronic Shutter: 8â1/8000sStill Image Size4000Ă3000Still Photography ModesSingle shot Burst shooting: 3/5/7 frames Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB): 3/5 bracketed frames at EV Bias Interval (JPEG: 2/3/5/7/10/15/20/30/60s RAW:5/7/10/15/20/30/60s)Video Resolution4K: 3840Ă2160 24/25/30p 2688Ă1512 24/25/30/48/50/60p FHD: 1920Ă1080 24/25/30/48/50/60/120p Max Video Bitrate100MbpsColor ModeD-CinelikeSupported File SystemFAT32 (†32 GB) exFAT (> 32 GB)Photo FormatJPEG / DNG (RAW)Video FormatMP4 / MOV (MPEG-4 AVC/ HEVC/ RangeTilt: -135â45° Pan: -100â100°Controllable RangeTilt: -90â30° Pan: -75â75°Stabilization3-axis (tilt, roll, pan)Max Control Speed (tilt)120° /sAngular Vibration Range± (Mavic 2 Pro) ± (Mavic 2 Zoom)Remote ControllerOperating - GHz; - GHzMax Transmission Distance (unobstructed, free of interference) - GHz; - GHz FCC: 10000 m CE: 6000 m SRRC: 6000 mMIC: 6000 mOperating Temperature Range0â - 40âTransmission Power (EIRP) - GHz FCC: â€26 dBm CE: â€20 dBm SRRC: â€20 dBmMIC: â€20 dBm GHz FCC: â€26 dBm CE: â€14 dBm SRRC: â€26 dBmBattery3950 mAhOperating Current/Voltage1800 mA â VSupported Mobile Device SizeMax length: 160 mm; max thickness: mmSupported USB Port TypesLightning, Micro USB (Type-B), USB-CIntelligent Flight BatteryCapacity3850 VMax Charging VBattery TypeLiPo WhNet Weight297 gCharging Temperature Range5â to 40âMax Charging Power80 WSupported SD CardsSupported SD CardsMicro SDâą Supports a microSD with capacity of up to 128 GB. A UHS-I Speed Grade 3 rating microSD card is microSD Cards32G Sandisk V30 Sandisk Extreme V30 Pro 64G Sandisk Extreme Pro V30 128G Sandisk Extreme V30 Sandisk Extreme Pro V30Kingston Canvas Go!Kingston Canvas ReactFootnotesFootnotes[1] Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing includes left/right, up/down, and forward/backward obstacle sensing. Sensing for left/right directions is only available in ActiveTrack , POI, QuickShot and Tripod mode. Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing does not fully cover the circumference of a 360-degree arc. And left and right obstacle sensing system only works in specific modes and environments. DJI warranty does not cover any loss caused by crashing when flying left or right, even when ActiveTrack or Tripod mode is activated. Please be aware of your surroundings and App notifications when operating the Mavic 2 to ensure specs have been determined through tests conducted with the latest firmware. Firmware updates can enhance performance, so updating to the latest firmware is highly Cosmic Voyage with the DJI Mavic 22018-08-23Introducing the DJI Mavic 22018-08-23TutorialsMavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to Update the Firmware with DJI GO 42018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - Updating the Firmware with Assistant 22018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - First Flight2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to use the Mavic 2âs Hyperlapse Mode2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - Dolly Zoom2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Point of Interest Tutorial2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to Activate DJI Mavic 22018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to Link the Mavic 2 Remote Controller2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to calibrate DJI Mavic 2âs Vision System2018-08-23Mavic 2 Series Tutorial - How to Calibrate the IMU2018-08-23How to detach or reattach the Mavic 2âs Gimbal Protector2018-10-30MANUALSMavic 2 Pro/Zoom Release Notes2021-04-22Mavic 2 Pro/Zoom User Manual 2 Pro Quick Start Guide 2 Zoom Quick Start Guide 2 Pro In the Box2018-08-23Mavic 2 Zoom In the Box2018-08-23Mavic 2 Disclaimer and Safety Guidelines2018-08-23Mavic 2 Intelligent Flight Battery Safety Guidelines2018-08-23DLog-M to Rec. 709 LUT User Guide2018-10-19APP / LIVE VIEWiOS V Requires iOS or later (Mavic 2 Pro/Zoom requires iOS or later).Compatible with iPhone X, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 8, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone SE, iPad Pro, iPad, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4. Optimized for iPhone Requires Android or with Samsung S9+, Samsung S9, Samsung S8+, Samsung S7, Samsung S7 Edge, Samsung S6, Samsung S6 Edge, Samsung Note 8, Huawei P20 Pro, Huawei P20, Huawei P10 Plus, Huawei P10, Huawei Mate 10 Pro, Huawei Mate 10, Huawei Mate 9 Pro, Huawei Mate 9, Huawei Mate 8, Honor 10, Honor 9, Vivo X20, Vivo X9, OPPO Find X, OPPO R15, OPPO R11, Mi Mix 2S, Mi Mix 2, Mi 8, Mi 6, Redmi Note 5, Google Pixel 2XL, OnePlus 6, OnePlus 5T.*Support for additional devices available as testing and development Assistant 2 For MavicDLog-M to Rec709 are the main differences between the Mavic 2 Pro and Mavic 2 Zoom?The only difference between both editions is their respective gimbal cameras. to the Mavic Pro, how has the Mavic 2 been improved?The Mavic 2 is an improvement in almost all aspects over the Mavic Pro including camera performance, video transmission, flight time, flight speed, low-noise, omnidirectional obstacle sensing, intelligent functions, and its unique Hyperlapse the Mavic 2 compatible with DJI Goggles series?Yes. The Mavic 2 is compatible with DJI Goggles (firmware version or above) and DJI Goggles RE (firmware version or above). Please first activate DJI Goggles or DJI Goggles RE and update their firmware to the latest one on your computer using DJI Assistant 2. Power on DJI Goggles or DJI Goggles RE, choose Linking in Settings, then choose Mavic 2. Press the link button on the Mavic 2 and wait for a few seconds to connect DJI Goggles or DJI Goggles RE to the aircraft. DJI Goggles only support the GHz signal frequency, while DJI Goggles RE support dual signal frequency for more powerful performance. * To download the version of DJI Assistant 2 that is compatible with DJI Goggles RE, please visit * To download the version of DJI Assistant 2 that is compatible with DJI Goggles, please visit: the Mavic 2 waterproofïŒ are the main advantages of the cameras on both the Mavic 2 Pro and Mavic 2 Zoom?The Mavic 2 Pro comes equipped with the all-new Hasselblad L1D-20c camera. The brand new 1-inch CMOS sensor has an active sensing area four times more effective than the original Mavic Pro. The large sensor also means better performance in low-light environments with a more extensive ISO range, and max ISO lifted from 3200 to Mavic 2 Zoom is all about dynamic perspectives and is powered by a 1/ 12-megapixel sensor with up to four-times zoom, including a two-times optical zoom (24-48mm) for more creative aerial photography options. is the L1D-20c on the Mavic 2 Pro designed by Hasselblad?DJI and Hasselblad have spent the last two years in collaboration making the L1D-20c camera, co-developing attributes such as lens definition, image processing engine, and image effect optimization, to make a Hasselblad quality camera small enough to fit on the new Mavic 2 Pro. The L1D-20c also possesses Hasselbladâs unique Hasselblad Natural Colour Solution (HNCS) technology, helping users to capture gorgeous 20-megapixel aerial shots in stunning color advantages does the Mavic 2 Pro have when recording video?The Mavic 2 Pro is capable of recording 3840Ă2160 10-bit 4K Dlog-M and 4K HDR 10-bit videos at 100Mbps. is the focal length of the Mavic 2 Zoom?The Mavic 2 Zoom's 24â48 mm optical zoom camera supports shooting at 4x lossless zoom 1080p video. I use the remote controller to move the Mavic 2's gimbal 75° from left to right?No. However, you can control the Mavic 2âs gimbal movements with DJI GO 4 or a connected pair of DJI Goggles. In DJI GO 4, press and drag any point of the app's live view interface to do so. You can also rotate the gimbal left and right to a maximum angle of 75° when using Head Tracking mode on the DJI Goggles series. does the Mavic 2 not have Portrait mode like the Mavic Pro?The Mavic 2âs gimbal structure is optimized for increased stability, meaning that the camera is unable to rotate the gimbal along the roll axis. However, you can choose Vertical mode in Panorama to achieve a stitched vertical photo. does Dlog-M only feature on the Mavic 2 Pro and not the Mavic 2 Zoom?Dlog-M is only available on the Mavic 2 Pro because the pro version was designed with the needs of professional photographers in mind, meeting demands for greater color correction capabilities. On the other hand, the Mavic 2 Zoom has D-Cinelike to realize quick and easy color correction. Along with Dlog-M, D-Cinelike reserves more highlight and color information than any normal color correction mode, leaving more room for post-processing. Mavic 2 take photos while recording video?No. is the difference between Full FOV mode and HQ mode under Mavic 2 Proâs 4K resolution?Full FOV down samples from the sensor to 4K resolution while HQ crops in the center for finer image quality but less FOV. Full FOV view is 75° and HQ view is 55°. You can select between them according to your actual shooting I adjust the focal length for Dolly Zoom on the Mavic 2 Zoom? can I save the original photos generated when shooting Hyperlapse videos?Go to Camera Settings and tap the âSave Originalâ button. You can select to save the original photos of the Hyperlapse video in either JPEG or RAW format. In âStorage Locationâ you can choose to keep them on the Micro SD card or the internal is the maximum flight distance of the Mavic 2?18 km in extreme testing environments measured in kph windless conditions down to 0% battery. However, be sure to keep enough battery during flights for a safe return. is the maximum wind resistance level of the Mavic 2?The Mavic 2 can resist up to level 5 winds on the Beaufort the Mavic 2's low-noise propellers be used on the Mavic Pro Platinum?No, the sizes are different, and therefore cannot be used on the Mavic Pro are the maximum flight and hovering times different on the Mavic 2?The Mavic 2's rotor system is optimized primarily for forward flight. Thanks to its more aerodynamic airframe, the Mavic 2 consumes less power at certain forward flight speeds than when hovering. Therefore, the maximum hovering time is 29 minutes in environments with no wind while the maximum flight time can be up to 31 minutes flying at a constant speed in conditions with no Obstacle Sensing is Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing?Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing includes left/right, up/down, and forward/backward obstacle sensing. Sensing for left/right directions is only available in ActiveTrack, POI, QuickShot and Tripod mode. Note: Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing does not fully cover the circumference of a 360-degree arc. And the left and right obstacle sensing system only works in specific modes and environments. DJI warranty does not cover any loss caused by crashing when flying left or right, even when ActiveTrack or Tripod mode is activated. Please be aware of your surroundings and App notifications when operating the Mavic 2 to ensure safety. I manually turn on/off the Bottom Auxiliary Light located at the bottom of the aircraft?Yes. The Mavic 2's default setting has auto LED enabled, which turns the Bottom Auxiliary Light on/off depending on the brightness of your environment. You can disable this feature in the app, and you can also manually turn on/off the Bottom Auxiliary Light in the app. Remote Controller & Video has the FHD video transmission of OcuSync improved over the first OcuSync? OcuSync supports both GHz and GHz frequency bands, featuring stronger interference resistance and auto-switching capabilities to deliver 10 km 1080p video transmission feeds (unobstructed, free of interference, and when FCC compliant). is the latency of OcuSync ms, which is 40â50 ms shorter than the first generation. the remote controller support HDMI output? I connect my smartphone to the remote controller using an ordinary USB cable?You can use an ordinary USB cable to connect your smartphone to the remote controller via the USB port at the bottom of the controller (be sure to pull up the cable at the Micro USB port). This might, however, prove to be slightly inconvenient when flying the aircraft. Cables with different connectors come with the aircraft so you can choose the one most appropriate for you. the Mavic 2 support Wi-Fi control?No. You can only control it using a remote mobile devices does the remote controller support?Mobile phones that are mm thick and no more than 160 mm long will fit in the remote controller clamps comfortably. We strongly recommend you to remove the protective cover before attaching your mobile phone. For tablets beyond this measurement range, please purchase the DJI Mavic 2 Tablet I use the Battery Charging Hub to charge four batteries simultaneously?No. The Battery Charging Hub charges batteries in sequence according to their power levels from high to low, avoiding the hassle of interchanging them while charging. Charging in sequence gives you a fully charged battery in the quickest possible long does it take to fully charge a battery?Approximately do I store the batteries when not in use?It is recommended to fully charge the batteries at least once every three I use other apps while updating the DJI GO 4 app?No. If you do, the update will fail. You will then need to download the firmware and update it I disconnect from the internet once the firmware has been downloaded?Yes. should I do if aircraft and battery firmware versions are inconsistent?Connect the Mavic 2 to the DJI GO 4 app. The app will then check firmware compatibility automatically. You may upgrade according to the the Mavic 2's remote controller support hot swapping while connected to DJI Assistant 2?No. You need to connect the remote controller with a USB cable and then power on to connect to DJI Assistant factors could lead to an update failure?1. Low-battery level. Before installing an update, make sure the battery level is above 50%. 2. Powering off the Mavic 2 or the remote controller during an update. If this happens, restart the Mavic 2 and the remote controller, and begin the update again. 3. Internet was disconnected during the firmware download. If the update failure persists, or the remote controller does not link with the aircraft, there may be firmware inconsistencies between devices. In this case, use DJI Assistant 2 on your computer to update the aircraft and the remote controller to the latest versions separately.
11 Depuis la sortie de son Mavic Pro en 2016, DJI occupe le devant de la scĂšne avec ses drones Ă la fois compacts, intelligents et capables de produire une bonne qualitĂ© d'image. Le Chinois entend bien garder sa couronne avec un Mavic 2 Pro encore plus Ă©voluĂ©. PrĂ©sentation Contrairement au Mavic Pro, le Mavic 2 se dĂ©cline en deux versions : une "Pro", ici testĂ©e, qui embarque cette fois une camĂ©ra Ă capteur 1", mais aussi une "Zoom", qui se distingue par un zoom optique (2x) dont les autres Mavic sont dĂ©pourvus. En dehors de cette diffĂ©rence de camĂ©ra, les Mavic 2 sont techniquement identiques, Ă 2 grammes prĂšs. Prise en main DJI a su mettre tout le monde d'accord avec le design pliable de son Mavic Pro : bien pensĂ©, il permet d'emporter son drone partout avec soi et de le dĂ©ployer en quelques secondes seulement. C'est donc fort logiquement que le Mavic 2 adopte le mĂȘme principe de bras pliables. Le design gĂ©nĂ©ral Ă©volue toutefois, le Mavic 2 Pro arborant une forme plus travaillĂ©e et un peu moins anguleuse que son aĂźnĂ©. La qualitĂ© de fabrication est impeccable et les plastiques paraissent solides. La dĂ©nomination "Pro" ne semble ainsi pas usurpĂ©e, l'appareil inspire confiance et paraĂźt encore mieux construit que le prĂ©cĂ©dent. MalgrĂ© son cĂŽtĂ© pliable, on ne note aucun jeu excessif et la rigiditĂ© est au rendez-vous. Seuls les caches souples protĂ©geant les diffĂ©rents ports paraissent un peu DJI Mavic 2 Pro en vol fois en main, on remarque toutefois que le quadrirotor chinois a pris de l'embonpoint. Il est en effet plus volumineux que le premier Mavic Pro. De 198 x 83 x 83 mm, il passe ainsi Ă 214 x 91 x 84 mm pliĂ© ; une fois dĂ©pliĂ©, il occupe un volume de 322 x 242 x 84 mm et se montre donc plus long d'environ 8 cm. Surtout, il est aussi plus lourd, passant de 734 g Ă 907 g. Une diffĂ©rence qui n'a rien d'anodin, puisqu'il franchit ainsi la barre des 800 g et change de cadre lĂ©gislatif (voir encadrĂ©). Si l'on ajoute la tĂ©lĂ©commande (317 g) et un smartphone de masse moyenne (180 g), on atteint environ 1,4 kg, ce qui reste assez lĂ©ger dans l'absolu, mais dĂ©jĂ moins si l'on souhaite le transporter dans un sac toute la journĂ©e. En itinĂ©rance, on pourra ainsi prĂ©fĂ©rer la lĂ©gĂšretĂ© du Mavic Air, par exemple, bien que sa portĂ©e d'utilisation soit sensiblement plus alourdissement se justifie toutefois par l'ajout de plusieurs capteurs et l'emploi d'une batterie 4S, plus puissante, mais plus lourde (297 g, soit 57 g de plus que celle du Mavic Pro).Du cĂŽtĂ© de la radiocommande, pas de bouleversement, les changements sont mineurs, mais tout de mĂȘme bienvenus. En premier lieu, on apprĂ©cie surtout la possibilitĂ© de dĂ©visser les sticks pour le transport. Ceux-ci se rangent dans les petites encoches pouvant aussi servir Ă maintenir le smartphone durant l'utilisation. DJI a pensĂ© Ă en fournir une seconde paire pour les remplacer en cas de radiocommande fournie avec le Mavic 2 Pro, ici utilisĂ©e avec un "petit" smartphone Samsung Galaxy est possible de piloter le Mavic 2 Pro sans smartphone, ce n'est toutefois guĂšre pratique dans la mesure oĂč l'Ă©cran de la radiocommande ne sert qu'Ă afficher des informations sur le vol et l'Ă©tat du drone. Pour voir ce que filme le drone, la meilleure solution reste donc de passer par l'application DJI Go 4, compatible avec la plupart des smartphones Android et iOS. Nous avons cependant subi quelques mĂ©saventures (mises Ă jour impossibles via le smartphone, pertes de liaison...), en particulier avec des smartphones Huawei (P8 et P9) et l'on ne saurait que trop vous conseiller de vĂ©rifier que votre smartphone figure bien dans la liste des modĂšles compatibles. Heureusement, aucun problĂšme Ă signaler avec nos Galaxy S6 et Honor Play ayant servi aux tests, hormis quelques subtilitĂ©s de positionnement dans la tĂ©lĂ©commande. Le systĂšme de branchement par cĂąble USB, notamment, n'est pas des plus pratiques pour la mise en place de certains smartphones, le connecteur ayant tendance Ă bouger un peu et demandant Ă ĂȘtre bien et molettes apportent du confort et Ă©vitent d'avoir Ă manipuler l'Ă©cran du smartphone pendant le vol. Vol Le Mavic 2 Pro est prĂȘt Ă voler tout aussi rapidement que ses prĂ©dĂ©cesseurs. Il suffit de retirer la bulle de protection de sa camĂ©ra, de dĂ©plier ses quatre bras et de l'allumer. On allume ensuite la radiocommande et on y connecte le smartphone qui peut automatiquement lancer l'application DJI Go 4 si on l'y autorise. AprĂšs vĂ©rification du firmware si le smartphone est connectĂ© Ă un rĂ©seau et aprĂšs acquisition des signaux GPS (l'affaire de quelques secondes seulement en gĂ©nĂ©ral), on accĂšde Ă l'interface de vol affichant l'image capturĂ©e par la camĂ©ra et tout un tas d'informations Ă l'Ă©cran. Ces derniĂšres sont utiles, mais plutĂŽt envahissantes et parfois en redondance de celles affichĂ©es sur l'Ă©cran de la radiocommande. Heureusement, on peut les faire disparaĂźtre d'un simple glissement de doigt sur l'Ă©cran, afin de mieux voir ce que capture la est complĂšte, mais dĂ©marrage des moteurs se fait en positionnant les deux sticks dans le coin infĂ©rieur bas, vers l'intĂ©rieur. Il suffit ensuite de pousser le stick gauche pour dĂ©coller. Un bouton sur l'interface permet de dĂ©coller automatiquement, le Mavic 2 Pro se positionnant alors en vol stationnaire Ă environ 1,2 m au-dessus de son point de dĂ©collage. La radiocommande est paramĂ©trĂ©e en mode 2 par dĂ©faut (gaz et lacet Ă gauche, tangage et roulis Ă droite), mais on peut choisir un autre rĂ©glage si besoin. PrĂ©cisons cependant que le stick gauche ne contrĂŽle pas vĂ©ritablement les gaz, mais la hauteur du quadrirotor, puisqu'il revient automatiquement au centre. Le Mavic 2 est en effet totalement stabilisĂ© et reste parfaitement en place lorsqu'on ne touche plus aux commandes. Un comportement trĂšs rassurant et Ă©videmment bien adaptĂ© Ă la prise de vues, raison d'ĂȘtre de cet le dessous, plusieurs capteurs et deux leds pour Ă©clairer sous le drone en cas de vol dans la pĂ©nombre, voire de nuit (interdit en France).Les commandes se montrent en tout cas assez rĂ©actives. Pas autant qu'avec une liaison radio analogique en 2,4 GHz, bien sĂ»r, mais bien assez pour piloter en sĂ©curitĂ© et maĂźtriser son cadrage. La liaison numĂ©rique OcuSync mise au point par DJI offre d'ailleurs une remarquable qualitĂ© de transmission, avec un signal vidĂ©o 1080p pouvant ĂȘtre envoyĂ© sur plusieurs kilomĂštres. Les interfĂ©rences dĂ©pendent bien sĂ»r des obstacles et du dĂ©nivelĂ© entre le drone et la radiocommande, mais lors de nos essais sur terrain plat, nous avons pu aller jusqu'Ă 2 km sans problĂšme d'affichage. Gare cependant Ă respecter la lĂ©gislation française qui impose de garder l'appareil en vue directe, ce qui limite forcĂ©ment un peu les d'inquiĂ©tude Ă avoir en revanche en cas de perte de signal, le Mavic 2 intĂšgre une puce GPS+Glonass lui permettant de revenir automatiquement Ă son point de dĂ©collage ou bien Ă l'endroit oĂč se trouve son pilote. Il dispose par ailleurs d'une myriade de capteurs lui permettant d'Ă©viter les obstacles, ce qui peut Ă©viter bien des accidents et s'avĂšre surtout trĂšs rassurant. Le Mavic 2 Pro double pour ainsi dire le nombre de ses capteurs de collision par rapport au Mavic Pro : on trouve toujours deux camĂ©ras sur l'avant et deux camĂ©ras ainsi qu'un capteur infrarouge sur le dessous, mais aussi dĂ©sormais deux camĂ©ras latĂ©rales et deux Ă l'arriĂšre, ainsi qu'un capteur infrarouge sur le dessus. De quoi offrir au drone une vision Ă 360° pour dĂ©tecter des obstacles dans toutes les directions. Et force est de constater que cela fonctionne Ă merveille. La fonction APAS permet mĂȘme de laisser le drone Ă©viter les obstacles automatiquement, ce qui permet de se concentrer sur le cadrage. Mieux vaut nĂ©anmoins ne pas perdre sa vigilance, le systĂšme n'Ă©tant pas infaillible pour autant, en particulier si l'on prend un peu de vitesse. Les obstacles les plus fins, comme des branches sans feuilles ou des lignes Ă©lectriques, peuvent par exemple passer entre les mailles du filet, y compris avec le mode TrĂ©pied dans lequel tous les capteurs sont activĂ©s et la vitesse rĂ©duite. Le mode Normal, pour sa part, n'utilise pas les capteurs latĂ©raux, tandis que le mode Sport dĂ©sactive totalement la dĂ©tection d'obstacles, laissant un plus grand contrĂŽle au pilote et augmentant la vitesse du drone (jusqu'Ă 72 km/h ; prise d'angle supĂ©rieure).Le niveau de charge de la batterie est reprĂ©sentĂ© par 4 quarts de cercle. Il est trĂšs facile de changer la systĂšme anticollision fait Ă©galement des merveilles lorsqu'il s'agit d'utiliser la fonction ActiveTrack Le Mavic 2 est alors capable de suivre un sujet automatiquement et fait en sorte de cadrer et voler en le gardant au centre de l'image. DĂ©jĂ impressionnante sur le Mavic Pro, elle l'est encore plus sur cette deuxiĂšme version. Elle peut ainsi assurer le suivi malgrĂ© une perte visuelle du sujet pendant un court instant, et parvient Ă faire Ă©voluer le drone entre les arbres sans le transformer en tronçonneuse malgrĂ© gĂ©nĂ©ralement, les modes de vol automatisĂ©s sont encore une fois Ă l'honneur et on dispose ainsi de multiples options crĂ©atives pour rĂ©aliser des plans d'ordinaire assez techniques Ă rĂ©aliser pour un pilote ou mĂȘme un cadreur â la difficultĂ© Ă©tant principalement de gĂ©rer Ă la fois le vol et le cadrage en gardant une bonne fluiditĂ©. Un mode cinĂ©matique est nĂ©anmoins proposĂ© pour nous aider dans cette tĂąche, en lissant les commandes. On note Ă©galement l'introduction d'un mode timelapse automatique, diablement efficace. QualitĂ© d'image C'est vĂ©ritablement sur la qualitĂ© d'image que le Mavic 2 Pro se distingue de son prĂ©dĂ©cesseur et de la version Zoom. Il embarque en effet une camĂ©ra dĂ©veloppĂ©e en collaboration avec Hasselblad, fabricant suĂ©dois rĂ©putĂ© d'appareils photo moyen format. Celle-ci dispose d'une optique Ă focale fixe Ă©quivalent 28 mm et Ă ouverture variable de f/2,8 Ă f/11. DerriĂšre officie un capteur Cmos de 1" Ă 20 Mpx. En comparaison, les Mavic Pro et Mavic 2 Zoom se contentent d'un capteur Cmos de 1/2,3" Ă 12 une meilleure dĂ©finition d'image, ce capteur offre au Mavic 2 Pro une meilleure dynamique et une plus grande sensibilitĂ©. Cela n'a rien d'anodin, en particulier pour un drone qui doit souvent subir des Ă©carts de luminositĂ© importants. Ce nouveau Mavic rejoint ainsi le Phantom 4 Pro, Ă©quipĂ© d'un capteur photos en HDR (Ă droite), offrent un rendu plus contrastĂ© et plus changement de camĂ©ra s'accompagne de rĂ©glages plus nombreux dans l'application. On peut ainsi monter jusqu'Ă 12 800 ISO en photo, 6 400 ISO en vidĂ©o, rĂ©gler le temps d'exposition et jouer sur l'ouverture. On profite Ă©galement d'un rĂ©glage de la balance des blancs et de profils d'image. L'enregistrement des photos peut se faire en Jpeg et en Raw, tandis que les vidĂ©os sont encodĂ©es en H264 ou H265. Ce dernier offre l'avantage d'une meilleure compression et l'on Ă©conomise ainsi de l'espace sur la carte mĂ©moire. Ce format permet par ailleurs de profiter de tous les raffinements du capteur et notamment de l'enregistrement sur 10 bits (Dlog-M) et en HDR. Revers de la mĂ©daille, il faut un ordinateur assez puissant pour le qualitĂ© de l'optique est satisfaisante, avec un bon piquĂ© au centre et une perte raisonnable en pĂ©riphĂ©rie de l'image, en tĂ©moignent les photos de notre scĂšne test prises au laboratoire. Un rĂ©sultat que l'on retrouve en vol, mĂȘme si l'on note une petite baisse de piquĂ© due Ă la mode vidĂ©o automatique, dans des conditions lumineuses dĂ©licates, l'appareil monte en ISO et cela gĂ©nĂšre un peu de bruit, mais l'image reste largement exploitable et la plupart du temps bien exposĂ©e. Si besoin, on peut toujours basculer en mode manuel pour ajuster soi-mĂȘme les diffĂ©rents paramĂštres de prise de mode manuel (ici en configuration photo) permet de rĂ©gler les ISO, l'ouverture et le temps de Mavic 2 Pro est capable de filmer jusqu'en Ultra HD Ă 30 i/s. On regrette qu'il ne propose pas 60 i/s Ă cette dĂ©finition, ni mĂȘme un enregistrement en 4K CinĂ© (4 096 x 2 160 px). Des caractĂ©ristiques encore rĂ©servĂ©es au Phantom 4 Pro. Les 60 i/s sont accessibles uniquement en 2,7K et en Full HD. Autonomie La batterie LiPo du Mavic 2 Pro passe au format 4S. Si sa capacitĂ© augmente peu par rapport Ă la 3S du Mavic Pro (3 850 mAh contre 3 830 mAh), ses 4 cellules dĂ©livrent une tension plus importante (15,4 V contre 11,4 V), Ă mĂȘme d'alimenter des moteurs plus cela, l'autonomie du Mavic 2 Pro est en hausse par rapport Ă celle du Mavic Pro. DJI annonce 4 minutes de plus en vol, soit jusqu'Ă 31 minutes sans vent avec une vitesse de 25 km/h et 25 minutes en "vol normal" (jusqu'Ă 15 % de batterie). Dans la pratique, les rĂ©glages par dĂ©faut dĂ©clenchent une alarme Ă partir de 25 % de batterie restante, aprĂšs un temps de vol effectif d'une bonne vingtaine de minutes. En gardant le contrĂŽle manuel, on peut prolonger le vol de quelques minutes, mais rarement au-delĂ de 25 minutes. Les 31 minutes annoncĂ©es correspondent Ă une dĂ©charge complĂšte de la batterie, en coupant toutes les alertes pour maintenir le drone en l'air, ce qui n'est ni rĂ©aliste ni recommandable pour la durĂ©e de vie de la batterie. On a nĂ©anmoins le temps de rĂ©aliser de belles prises de vues avec les rĂ©glages par d'au moins une batterie supplĂ©mentaire est tout de mĂȘme recommandĂ©, bien que la recharge ne soit pas trop longue (1h30). En effet, il n'est pas possible de recharger Ă partir d'une simple batterie externe de grosse capacitĂ©, contrairement Ă ce que propose le Parrot point en revanche, le Mavic 2 Pro utilise une batterie dite "intelligente", en cela qu'elle intĂšgre un gestionnaire de charge et divers systĂšmes visant Ă la prĂ©server. Pratique pour ne pas avoir Ă se soucier de son temps de charge ou de sa charge de stockage, par exemple. Points forts Bonne qualitĂ© d'image. Nombreux modes de vol utiles et bien pensĂ©s. DĂ©tection des obstacles de tous les cĂŽtĂ©s. Vol facile et sĂ©curisant / StabilitĂ©. Excellente qualitĂ© de fabrication. Toujours compact, bien qu'un peu plus gros que le Mavic Pro. Bonne autonomie. Points faibles Batteries rechargeables uniquement via le chargeur propriĂ©taire. Prix de lancement assez Ă©levĂ©. CamĂ©ra Ă capteur 1" de 20 Mpx ou Ă zoom optique avec petit capteur, il faut choisir (Mavic 2 Pro ou Mavic 2 Zoom). Des problĂšmes avec les mises Ă jour via le smartphone dĂ©tectĂ©s par plusieurs utilisateurs, nous compris. Application Android toujours pas traduite en français ! Conclusion Note globale Comment fonctionne la notation ? Le Mavic 2 Pro amĂ©liore tous les points du Mavic Pro, notre camĂ©ra volante prĂ©fĂ©rĂ©e de 2016. En plus d'une meilleure qualitĂ© d'image, il propose un vol encore plus sĂ©curisant grĂące Ă ses nombreux capteurs optiques et ses automatismes qui permettent de se concentrer sur le cadrage sans se soucier du pilotage. MalgrĂ© un gabarit un peu plus imposant, il reste facile Ă transporter et c'est un plaisir de pouvoir compter sur un tel appareil dans un grand nombre de situations. Le Mavic 2 Pro s'empare donc sans mal de la couronne du meilleur drone grand public de 2018 et devrait mĂȘme la garder quelque temps encore. Sous-Notes Prise en main Vol QualitĂ© d'image Autonomie
dji mavic pro 2 test