CloudVisual
Core User of DJI
Flight distance : 97545420 ft
United Kingdom
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All drones have a brake setting, that is, how hard it comes to a stop when the sticks are returned to the centre point. This setting is usually something that can be changed and DJI Go4 used to allow this. DJI fly doesn't, as with a lot of other useful settings that DJI feels we shouldn't have control over.
The Mavic 3 comes to an incredibly harsh stop when the sticks are released, even if the user gently returns them back. The drone should be set, like all other DJI drones, to come to a gentle and smooth stop, even if this means that it overruns the intended stopping point. (All drones overrun the stop point, as they can't stop on a dime, but it's how gently this happens is what's the issue here.)
Whilst the drone is in flight and, say, heading forwards, but in a diagonal direction (so the stick is towards the top corners of the controller) and then the user moves this to just flying forwards, the braking from a removal of horizontal input causes the drone to brake hard to not fly sideways any longer. The braking is so hard that it often causes it to try to correct this and ultimately ends up wobbling three of four times until it's in a stable flight.
This behaviour is typical with a drone which has the PID settings too high and the over corrections cause a feedback loop. The hard braking of the Mavic 3 causes it to try to correct the braking by violently flying the other way to level out, causing an oscillation. |
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