Cold? That looks warm, almost hot.I picked up a DJI Mini 2 from Very, with a 20% discount code and it may well be the best 'toy' I've ever purchased! The whole family is loving it. We took it out for the first time last weekend and I tried to get some panning shots of our dog Murphy. Suffice to say, a bit more practice and this is going to be amazing!
It was cold and it was windy, but the drone handled it so well.
DJI Mini 2. It's the default answer really.
If you can't quite stretch to that then a Mini SE which is essentially a Mini 1 in the Mini 2's shell. Not as good as the Mini 2 (less range, not as good camera) but still a great little flier.
As rilot said, if you can afford it, nothing comes close to the DJI Mini 2. Perfect for hiking long distances with, you wont even realise its there.
The Mini 1 has been on offer recently in the fly more package at £225 and the mini 2 at £423 but they were all post xmas sales and have finished now but may pop up again.
the fly more packagesa re great value as you get 3 batteries and spare props and a bag to carry it all in
Ta, doesn't seem like there's much competition in small drones at that price point! Will hunt around for good prices.
Is it able to automatically track a target? Ideally I want it to film me while I'm soloing mountain routes...so I don't want to faff about much. Find a decent stance, launch it, tell it do a thing, follow me for a bit for example, then a few minutes later at the next decent stance, recall it and pack it away.
The Mini 2 relies on 3rd party apps to do the tracking thing. For now, that is only available in the Android version of Lichi (iOS is coming later in the year once the iOS SDK is released).
For proper - baked in - tracking you need to be looking at the segment above. The Air 2 is the cheapest that will do what you ask.
However, everyone expects a Mini 3 to be launched this year with proper tracking built in. Autel have released their Nano line that has obatacle avoidance and tracking in a <250g device so I expect DJI to follow suit.
The absolute best drone for your use case would be a Skydio 2. It has the best tracking available and the best obstacle avoidance. You put it up in the air, tell it to track you, and you do your thing while it does its. Not available in the UK though and is expensive.
Ok cheers mate. Is there any sort of license he can do to be able to do this or is it just not legal?And public liabilities insurnace.
If he's planning to do this in towns he will need to cordon off an area for the flight to prevent uninvolved persons coming within 30M of the flight area. This is not really feasible if there is a house right next door or a road for example.
That remote is the more expensive version.the remote certainly looks interesting, it appears to have a screen on it which means you don't need to connect it to your phone? That would save me some hassle...