If all of this is true, then I'm assuming we'll see the same rate of failure even for those running firmware 1.6. Only time will tell now I suppose.
It's forums like this that cause more panic than what's really there.
It shouldn't matter if it is 90, 60, 50%. It should not shut off and fall out of the sky.
Experience > than assumption
I honestly think it's BS. I have never ran into that issue and I'm on the last update. I will let my batteries sit for greater than a week with no issue. Sure they are around 85% or so but that's just the lifestyle I live. Only when I have a dedicated trip planned with the phantom do I charge the night before. And that's rare.
This theory is pants. Working on photography in the field I can get 95% of shots in under 3 minutes then I bring the bird down move location, take off with the same battery. It's just not viable to say always take off with 100% when out in the field unless you had about 10 battery's, one for each location. I myself can take off at 50% get my shot and land but I am always monitoring voltage in the cells and I don't fly at full throttle.
I just don't think dji would devolp something to use professionally with such a big clause over the battery.
I think I've read every battery thread and every drop from the sky thread of the past four months.
The common denominator is the auto-discharge. If your battery begins auto-discharge, and you don't recharge it, it has a good chance of shutting down in mid flight.
Here's the difference from what I can gather from all the reports on this forum:
If you just charge your battery up to say 65%, take it off the charger, then go out and use it. You would not have the problem.
If you left your battery on the shelf for a few days UNTIL auto-discharge kicks in. Then you go use THAT battery for some hard flying (say ascending and accelerating forward at the same time at full speed), you would potentially get the battery shut off in mid-air issue (in previous version of firmware).
In all the cases that I have read happened, reported, and DAT files provided, the "starting out" capacity of the battery was way less than what the DJI Go App reported. Hence, you get people thinking they actually still have 65% of battery when in fact they have less than 20% and then took it out for hard flying.
I was at a regional RC event (representing my rocketry club that shares the same facility) and an airplane fell out of the sky and landed about 4 feet from me in the spectator area. No sound because the engine had stopped. The reason it stopped was probably the flaming battery pack inside the wreckage.The problem is that the firmware shuts down the aircraft to save the battery! Does anyone think this is a good idea?
Agreed.... when one cell collapses under load the rx can go offline (esp if the pack total voltage drops below the lower limit of the BEC).... happend to me more than once. The pack does seem to recover quick and to the point you can land. Load it up though and the problem repeats. It seems this is an operating characteristic of the lipo technology the smart circuitry cant sace us from. Unfortinately if it happens with the phantom its all over, no opportunity to glide.In dumb batts the charger balances the cells constantly all the way to full. From my exp pushing a 50% chgd batt hard by flying hard will create enough of a voltage drop to under power a receiver. In fixed wing immediatly flying easy will allow the batt volts to return so the rx will initialize and come bak online. Hence u dont fall from the sky due to gliding w fixed wing. Quads on the other hand dont glide. Batt voltage is dependant on the load its being ask of. If the load is too great the volts will drop below the needed requirement. Hence a shut down. Which for quads is a bad thing. Thots??
So when a battery enters discharge state. It becomes drunk and paralytic and can no longer communicate with the app. Causing false readings
Would you know if it is just the dji app messing up. As I am using litchi, in fact I might put a battery into discharge state and try both apps to see if readings are different.
HI,Your assumption is not correct. If this is true, no one would be able to fly at 50% charge ever. Secondly a good battery is capable of delivering rated current at up to low charges safely without creating voltage drops. Additional Voltage drops will occur if there are poor connections or ESC is unable to limit the currents. Good battery will have its internal resistance within the specified limits.
Holy Crap LlamboI don't wanna stir the pot but **** here goes
My battery was at 100 or **** near when I took off flew around for 10-12 min batt level at 50 %yhen drop out the sky from about 15 ft . P3p and four batteries less than a wk old. Discharge at default 10 days. At Dji support now waiting on it to be repaired and shipped back to me . At less than a wk old , I flew my bird daily and recharged to full every time. Maybe just a placebo
Due note new style motor and the day my quad crashed I got the update to 1.06 pop up when entering the app
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