I did an experiment to see if I can get underneath the battery voltage drop issue with the Inspire 1, and actually got four batteries to drop. My article about it caused a bit of a stir on Facebook, the intention is not to trash DJI, but rather help fellow droners to avoid costly mistakes and dangerous situations. The article is here, what do you guys think?:
http://www.dronevibes.com/2016/02/1...nspires-and-phantoms-dropping-out-of-the-sky/
I had conversations with DJI employees at CES about this "drop-gate" battery issue last month. I had two separate conversations, one at each of their two booths. I got the same story from both guys who were deemed the most knowledgeable about Phantom firmware in each booth. They said the problem is only in the 1.5 phantom motherboard firmware, which was quickly replaced 1 month after release with 1.6, which fixed this flaw in the MOTHERBOARD firmware,
so they claim. Apparently the 1.5 motherboard firmware changed from 1.4 in a way that introduced a sensor flaw that didn't accurately read the battery voltage correctly. They claimed the firmware interpreted the voltage to be lower than reality, which they claim is the root of our DROP-GATE flaw. As an example, even though the battery voltage correctly shows 3.7V/cell in the Go App after flying a few minutes, the firmware would see 3.0V, which triggers auto-land, or worse, power shutdown if below 3.0V on any cell (these numbers are examples, not facts, but they are in the ballpark). These sudden shutdowns obviously made craft fall from the sky, which is a shocking experience for those unfortunate pilots that have experienced this. Although DJI has been honoring these incidents under warranty, it's still a major concern for all Phantom/Inspire owners.
Also in the 1.6 firmware release, DJI included new
battery firmware which included a power governor that limits the current that can be sucked from the battery, hence minimizing dramatic voltage drop swings when you're on the last half of the battery. This governor seems to kick in at 3.6V, or about 30-40% charge in the DJI GO meter bar (according to my testing). Vertical ascent speeds at full throttle are normally 11mph, however when the new governor turns on this is reduced to about 7-8mph. Horizontal acceleration is also hindered in this case, but speed is still above 33mph, it just gets to that speed slower. This new battery firmware is an additional measure to mitigate dramatic voltage fluctuations, preventing premature auto landing, or worse, power shut down.
I don't understand why DJI hasn't FULLY FIXED this issue. I can understand why they want to shut down power, in case someone accidentally leaves the power turned on after the Phantom/Inspire has landed. I can easily see someone stowing away the craft in a case and forgetting it's on. So having a power shut down feature is good, WHEN THE CRAFT ISN'T FLYING. So why can't DJI create a requirement in the firmware that requires the craft to be grounded before power shut down occurs? They could do this just like pulling FULL DOWN on the left stick to shut off the motors, the craft must sense that it's on the ground before the motors will shut off. This sensing takes about 3 seconds to confirm and shut down, as experienced when you hand catch a Phantom3.