Did you shoot raw or jpeg?Last week, I had a job and in approximately 1/3 of the pictures, cyan replaced white. This could not be corrected by changing the white balance or in post. Anyone seen this before and if so, come up with a fix for it?
I'm normally set to take multiple exposures and RAW/JPEG, so I don't have to go back. This is actually a composite of 3 exposures, but the color is there on the Raw and each image.Did you shoot raw or jpeg?
Can you post an example file?
Not to be a pessimist but it looks like your camera is starting to fail. I would either contact DJI or another reputable repair house and see what it would cost to replace. You clearly need a reliable camera doing the work you are. Hoping someone else can offer a better solution than mine.
The color balance for the image looks good as a whole. This appears where the whites are blown out and may be a way of showing that it is out of gamut range. The other possibility is that as others stated the sensor may be on the way out. I had a camera of another brand that got vertical black lines in blown out areas. The sensor/lens assembly had to be replaced.I'm afraid it was the beginning of something, but was hoping it was a known failure mode, if it was. It was about 180 good pictures, 54 bad ones, then another 20 good ones that day. I went out and did a full apartment complex today and didn't see it. I haven't been able to reproduce it.
I had the exact same problem with a Yuneec Typhoon H, but I had physically damaged the board while trying to replace the lens.The color balance for the image looks good as a whole. This appears where the whites are blown out and may be a way of showing that it is out of gamut range. The other possibility is that as others stated the sensor may be on the way out. I had a camera of another brand that got vertical black lines in blown out areas. The sensor/lens assembly had to be replaced.
That’s the one, CGO3+ camera. Note my avatar.I had the exact same problem with a Yuneec Typhoon H, but I had physically damaged the board while trying to replace the lens.