Coyut
Core User of DJI
Flight distance : 2559222 ft
Switzerland
Offline
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Broadcast Mode is a joke.
It just converts a 25p stream to a 50i signal and puts it out on the hdmi on a stock rc and hdmi and sdi on a cendence (configurable).
BUT, the I2, and every other dji drone, only sends 17-25 (jumping) progressive frames per second to the remote, which converts it to broadcast ''ready'' 50i signal.
So you don't get unique interlaced frames, as you would need a 50p feed in the first place to do a correct conversion to 50i.
This produces a completely unusable, stacking feed. The guy who designed this process has no clue about what a broadcast ready signal is and how 50i works.
We tested every available dji drone, or image transfer solution from dji in a broadcast HF lab. Not a single one delivers quality for broadcast ready footage.
So we had to build a custom drone for our live broadcast jobs.
DJI has to build a stable 50p wireless imge transfer solution first before they should even think about marketing to have a broadcast ready solution.
Converting 25p to 50i can never work, even worse if the video feed is skipping frames already bellow 25p.
The only situation where we can see a dji drone to be used in live broadcast is for breaking news, where every bad image is better than none.
But using dji drones in a controled live broadcast production is currently a BIG NO.
The answer to your question is also no.
You will need some solution to grab the image on your rc and delivering it to the broadcast truck.
This can be done wireless, by cable or converted to a fiber cable.
The very best solution is to use some HF wireless devices (they use reserved frequencies) from your broadcast company on the drone, in the air, whith a camera that actually delivers a 50i feed, so you can send your images directly to the broadcast truck. This way you can also move free in different locations in previously specified sectors.
Using solutions like Teradek Bolt or Amimon Connex can work, but I would not use it for live broadcast work, as there is always a risk of other signals interfering and breaking the feed.
Its best you meet up with the broadcast HF team way in advance to discuss the best possible solution
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