Sunday, Dec 16, 2018 at 11:27
It's a minefield Michelle, as you say there are MANY new models now.
DJI are the #1 drone maker in the World for a reason.
There are other brands like GoPro, Parrot, Yuneec that all have pretty good consumer drones, but DJI seems to be at the top of the pack.
I really stopped following them all a while ago, and since then (Mavic Pro / Mavic Pro Platinum, Spark era) DJI have brought out a lot more.
Some of the new ones have sensors at the sides and rear, used to be just front and lower sensors, which can save a nasty collision (but not in all cases), but there are pros and cons to that too.
Eg. If flying into the sun, my front sensors can pick that up as an obstacle, and stop, want to go around it, so I'm not sure if side and rear could cause issues there.
I would have to adjust return flight to avoid sun straight on, or fly 'crab' style back.
Now, my suggestion is get a Spark.
Having flown a borrowed one the other day for the first time (
Rupanyup), I found it to be great, not as much range as a Mavic, but then you are supposed to keep VLOS (visual line of sight) of your drone by CASA rules anyway.
It's still about 400m to 500m *safe, in most cases*, but you should always fly safely with RTH (return to
home) settings to ensure it has safe height / passage to return if signal lost, or in some cases best to set to hover if wifi signal is lost to controller, that way you can move closer and get control back.
The Spark takes excellent 1080 videos, and I think it's 12mp photos, and I have been aware that they are supposed to produce better images / video straight out of the machine, with no editing.
It has track functions, and most of the special flight modes that the more costly DJI drones have.
I would look for the best value flymore combo, 3 batteries and charger station, bag and some other stuff, and start with this.
They are getting very cheap now all the new model Mavic Air, Zoom, etc are out, and fantastic to learn on.
You need to gain experience in the right order, first fly and get back, every time, all the flight functions so you understand this and don't lose it.
Then start taking pics, video.
Finally editing clips and putting little productions together is a whole new learning curve.
My Mavic Pro (with Platinum model props) is surprisingly quieter than the Spark, and the Mavic Pro / Mavic Pro Platinum models are a good step up from a Spark, and quite
well priced now too in the flymore combo.
Same to fly, but slightly larger / more stable in wind, faster, more range and safer connectivity between controller and drone at distance.
Phantoms are good, but large to transport.
I've flown a P4 and basically the same to control etc.
Good luck, it's a great hobby that goes so
well with 4WDn, bushwalking etc.
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Follow Up By: Member - nickb "boab" - Sunday, Dec 16, 2018 at 18:11
Sunday, Dec 16, 2018 at 18:11
I think also the spark is a good place to start w: controller , I use mine with an SS Androids 8' tablet & mount from ebay , also picked up two new batteries $130 pr giving me 4 in total . each battery will give you a little less than about 14 minutes of flying after low battery warnings / return to
home . the spark also have some gr8 features . But the spark has a limited camera Jpeg but can still take good shots . There are some really good youtube reviews a must b4 you buy IMO . these two have some of the best reviews on many drones IMO .
Jeven Dovey re~spark Ed Ricker re~spark
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