That fact to me is the #1 selling point of the wetsuits.
However, I would not purchase a wetsuit for my drone(s), and it has nothing to do with your product.
It has to do with the fact that rain can (and most likely WILL) get on the camera lens, and thereby mess up any photos or video I would be trying to take in the rain.
We thought that same thing but that simply is not the case , it takes and extremely hard rain to really get drops on the lens if your flying with the camera pointed slightly down, the same with the blizzard storms, we were amazed at clear the footage is that we get from the storms and many of them the rain does not even show up on the camera.
The key to flying in the rain is start with the camera straight down and once in flight make the tilt , if you do get a drop on the lens , using the C2 key to shake the camera down will clear it most likely.
There is a difference between the
Mavic 2 and the Phantom while filming in the Rain and that is you can almost fly directly in the Rain with the camera straight up and still not get rain drops on the Lens.
I have a ton of pictures of where it pouring rain but you cannot see the rain at al...
Here is an example
These pics are never posted because you cannot see the rain, and yet if you look at the river you can see its pouring.
I have hundreds of pictures but you cannot see the Rain so for me there worthless. lol
The video is exactly the same, it has to be a monsoon for that rain to be captured and that just does not happen all the time,. but for those that need to get the job done, there in good hands with the Wet Suit.