- Joined
- Aug 17, 2020
- Messages
- 327
- Reaction score
- 212
Having run many successful long range Litchi missions lasting until the battery drains down to 30% over 20 minutes on average, I became complacent, and paid less attention to detail, such as that all-important "Settings" option that MUST be set to have the drone do "Nothing", and NOT do an RTH landing on arrival at the launch point.
With growing confidence in the estimated flight time calculated for each mission by the Litchi Mission Hub, I had developed a habit of noting the takeoff time, adding to that the estimated flight duration, and then going indoors, with the intention of stepping outside exactly 5 minutes before the drone's estimated time of arrival, to disengage the autopilot and manually land the craft. Now this routine had worked perfectly for well over twenty long-range autonomous flights, only for me to get a rude awakening today.
I was sitting indoors at my desktop computer with an eye on the clock, when suddenly, TEN minutes before the drone's expected time of arrival, I heard what sounded like a lawn mower running over a patch of gravel, and then in the same instant, realized that my drone had made a full RTH , and inexplicably scuttled underneath a car parked near my landing pad.
I killed the engines on the remote as I sprinted outside, but those props did impact the floor of the car, and the ground. To describe my mood as dismayed, would be an understatement. I had just affixed a brand new set of props this morning, and already, two of them look as though I tried to mow the lawn with the drone.
After observing the requisite few moments of hair-pulling and rabid teeth-gnashing, I set the drone on my takeoff table, and punched the throttle. The bird lifted up into a dead stable hover, with no immediate indication of any lasting damage resulting from my act of monumental idiocy. None of the props are cracked, but any motor damage that may have been incurred probably won't become apparent until I run a proper test flight within visual range, tomorrow, when I recover from the shock of this debacle.
Moral of story, ALWAYS set your drone to do "Nothing" on arrival at the final waypoint. I was warned about this setting just two days ago in this forum, yet once again, I overlooked that setting, and launched the drone, confident that since all my altitudes had been meticulously cross-checked, nothing could possibly go wrong. Henceforth, I will also remain outdoors for the entire duration of every future flight, and will NEVER rely on the flight time figures from the Litchi Mission Hub since they are after all, subject to wind variations aloft. Wow ! What a day.
With growing confidence in the estimated flight time calculated for each mission by the Litchi Mission Hub, I had developed a habit of noting the takeoff time, adding to that the estimated flight duration, and then going indoors, with the intention of stepping outside exactly 5 minutes before the drone's estimated time of arrival, to disengage the autopilot and manually land the craft. Now this routine had worked perfectly for well over twenty long-range autonomous flights, only for me to get a rude awakening today.
I was sitting indoors at my desktop computer with an eye on the clock, when suddenly, TEN minutes before the drone's expected time of arrival, I heard what sounded like a lawn mower running over a patch of gravel, and then in the same instant, realized that my drone had made a full RTH , and inexplicably scuttled underneath a car parked near my landing pad.
I killed the engines on the remote as I sprinted outside, but those props did impact the floor of the car, and the ground. To describe my mood as dismayed, would be an understatement. I had just affixed a brand new set of props this morning, and already, two of them look as though I tried to mow the lawn with the drone.
After observing the requisite few moments of hair-pulling and rabid teeth-gnashing, I set the drone on my takeoff table, and punched the throttle. The bird lifted up into a dead stable hover, with no immediate indication of any lasting damage resulting from my act of monumental idiocy. None of the props are cracked, but any motor damage that may have been incurred probably won't become apparent until I run a proper test flight within visual range, tomorrow, when I recover from the shock of this debacle.
Moral of story, ALWAYS set your drone to do "Nothing" on arrival at the final waypoint. I was warned about this setting just two days ago in this forum, yet once again, I overlooked that setting, and launched the drone, confident that since all my altitudes had been meticulously cross-checked, nothing could possibly go wrong. Henceforth, I will also remain outdoors for the entire duration of every future flight, and will NEVER rely on the flight time figures from the Litchi Mission Hub since they are after all, subject to wind variations aloft. Wow ! What a day.