The way to avoid problems: Never fly drones from a place where you are accessible or visible. And never EVER talk about drones around 'drone guys' or 'radio guys', those two types of people will rat you out to the feds ASAP. I've flown in a country that has draconian laws with impunity for about 15+ years (and other RC before that). I have been flying planes since I was 13, so the thought of someone giving me grief over a literal childrens toy tier drone is so irritating that I just avoid it altogether.
European drone pilot here. The new EU regulation on drones is pretty good, because at first every country in Europe had their own set of rules. However the rules are strict, and yes bigger drones need registration. Even though I am registered, I have the recreational A1-3 licenses and I fly Mavic series drones, I almost completely stopped doing that and my go to drone is now also the Mini 3 Pro. Less rules, more opportunities.
That was a hell of an advertisement for it not to be sponsored! Honestly I was surprised when you said it wasn't sponsored. DJI should retroactively pay you for this 😂
kind of bs anyway. you cant compare big drones to small drones. its like comparing a cellphone to a real camera. The sensor is tiny all the details and depth is washed away and the image is smoothed out to compensate. Cellphones use tricks to fool you into believing the picture is better than it is which is also the case for drones. If you wanna fly around for fun get a small drone. if you actually want to use the footage in any kind of professional production you need the big boy to fit a real camera. It is not a replacement and never will be they are different kind of products meant for different things.
Arrested means that you're processed into the system, incarcerated, given a court date. Detained means you were held and questioned but not processed. A traffic stop is an example of being detained. If they find something criminal during the detained you can then be arrested and booked into jail @jacobfernandez6055
One thing to note while flying in weather is that if you're flying above a layer of fog and start descending through the fog, the landing sensor thinks that thick fog is actually the ground and starts initiating an auto landing. That's one way to soil your undies. I had to repeatedly lower altitude, cancel the auto landing, lower altitude etc etc about 20 times until it was all the way through the fog layer. I have no idea what it would have done if I didn't cancel the auto landing. (I hope the answer is that it would have just kept descending but never turn off the props because it never sensed that it stopped descending, but I wasn't about to find out).
I can confirm. I almost we my undies the same way. But if you let it auto land, it will keep descending until it feels the ground, it won't just shut off the propellers out of the blue. It was an intense experience.
Have you used it a lot for B-roll and other footage in your videos? Any projects down the road that you're planning on using it? Love your channel by the way! You make great content and it makes me happy seeing your channel grow :)
Be careful though. Here in Germany for example you also have to register UAV under 250g if they have a camera. It's just 20€ though if you're a private persion and 50$ for commercial.
To clarify: In the USA, even with a sub 250 gram drone, when using it commercially (like on this monetized channel) you will need to register the drone AND you will also need your FAA 107 certificate. The only time you don't need to register your drone is if it is less than 250 grams AND you are only flying recreationally. Happy flying!
The problem I have with this is how can you prove intentions of commercial or recreational use? I could be in full work clothing and if I policeman happens to ask I could simply say “ I’m not being paid for this, nor am I working right now, this is simply for fun, I just happen to be in work clothing.”
Hmm, it's a little more complicated than that in the US. Everything you said about sub 250g drones is correct for a recreational flyer, but filming for a monetized RUclips channel means you need a part 107 license, and flying part 107 means the drone must be registered no matter what size it is.
I hate to say this because I believe you should be right, but as of this moment RUclipsrs can fall into a grey area. If they are filming content for their RUclips channel it’s still considered recreational flying in part 107 eyes. I’d say in a couple years I’d say the laws will catch up and RUclipsrs will fall under 107 but currently they do not.
@@-b1ghorn087 The unfortunate truth is that if you are uploading it to RUclips it would be considered commercial, as you do have the potential of making money from that. My personal opinion is that it is a misguided law that will only make drones less safe (They have to target 249g to make it on the consumer market, meaning less sensors for collision detection and shorter flight time) and more impractical to use. I hope that one day the law is relaxed to allow greater innovation with consumer drones.
I also noticed that he said it was hard to recover when his gimbal stuck. Technically in the USA, you’re not supposed to fly out of sight, although I do it all the time too.😂
@@---capybara--- part 107 has nothing to do with commercial anything. I had that mistaken impression for a long time. I take pictures with my drone and put them on canvas frames and sell them from time to time when somebody likes them. Mostly scenery stuff. I do not have nor need a part 107 because it’s all about intent. I take pictures because it’s fun and I enjoy it. But if somebody comes along and sees one of my pictures and says I really like it will you sell it I do. RUclips is kind of the same thing. People make content with drones for RUclips because they want to. It’s not exactly a for profit guaranteed job exactly. Nobody is coming to them and says I’ll pay you x if you do such and such with your drone. They do what they want and upload it to RUclips recreationally and if they make a little money from it then good deal. It’s a very confusing topic. FYI until I took pilot institutes part 107 course from Greg I was under the same impression. I specifically had a conversation with the instructor and he explained to me the actual way it is. He verified my situation was legal and didn’t need part 107. He also gave me an example of if you were flying a drone and video’s something happen an you post it on social medias or whatever and a news channel contacts saying they would like to pay you to use it on the evening news for a story you are perfectly legal because 1. Your intent of the original flight was recreational and 2. You weren’t commissioned upfront for the flight.
@@jadesluv You can tell because affiliate links have special urls that incorporate the creator's name or brand. Also, RUclips regulation says that affiliate links have to be stated as such.
I bought a drone yesterday and I am from Germany. Yes, theoretically, every drone needs to be registered, no matter the weight. You also need to have an insurance cover for any damage you could cause. You also need a licence for drones over 250g.
That's some commitment to proper content right there. Creating a script and filming the respective pieces literally all around the world. This video SHOULD be sponsored, I guess DJI wouldn't pay a video team for ads to travel around the globe.
As a drone pilot, I really appreciate you making this content. It's becoming an issue that anyone can purchase a very capable drone online or from any box store, go home and charge the battery and be trained by an app how to fly it within a few hours, and circumvent any knowledge of how to fly safely and legally. I'll admit, I actually did the same thing a few years ago with the original Mavic Mini, but it wasn't my flavor, so I sold it and got into building DIY FPV quadcopters. This required a lot of time, money and effort, and along the way, interacting with a large community of enthusiasts that promote safety and legal flying as a priority. Government regulations are now making it more difficult for us hobbyists to fly, and the main reasons are casual fliers with no understanding of their violations, AND large corporations wanting to harness that same airspace for their own businesses, like drone delivery. I'm in Canada, but I'm now licensed and have registered my +250g rigs with Transport Canada, and closely follow new imposed regulations, such as Remote ID. If we don't follow the basic laws and clamp down on safety issues, we're going to be regulated out of the sky, in favor of big business. I'm not a bootlicker, I just love my hobby, and don't want to see it die, so please, everyone do your part to, at the very least, be smart about flying, so we can all enjoy this incredible technology, and the joy of "flight". 😁✌🏻
Is under 250g legal in Canada, maybe Ontario? Not sure if it's a provincial law. It's still amazing that for 1K+tax we can get an FPV drone like this to learn how to fly and shoot good quality video. I would still study what the rules are; it's not the Wild West.
@@OviWanKeno9i absolutely man, it is legal below 250g to fly without a license or registration. It's kind of considered a toy in the eyes of the government, but you still have to follow the same safety and privacy laws as you would with a larger drone, and your local areas may have bylaws a boat flying in certain places. I live in a small town in Alberta, and there are no drone signs at some of the local park attractions, so I usually end up flying at like a schoolyard or an empty lot. Those minis are so capable, they're an absolute blast. The only thing I would take into consideration is how windy it is in your area. When they get that small and light, they sometimes have trouble fighting strong winds, like above 25 km an hour. And the higher you go in the sky, the stronger the wind is on any given day. I've been thinking about getting another one just because they're such a excellent machine to have in the tool bag. 🙂
@@airtec87 sorry to hear that, man. Are you living close to restricted airspace? There is a lot of instances where law enforcement will tell you you can't fly something, when they don't actually have jurisdiction. They can only instruct you that you can not launch or land in certain areas, but they don't have any jurisdiction over airspace. That's for transport Canada to decide. I know what you mean tho, I don't like getting into disputes with people, sometimes it's easier to just find a different location. I found that most people don't know the law anyways, which is why I got my basic license. You can diffuse 95% of the situations by just telling them that you have a license, I which point they mostly assume that you know the laws better than they do.
Thanks for being honest about this, hopefully fellow RUclipsrs around the world will listen to your words as it affects the entire community. With the remote ID aspect taking effect soon enough this is only going to be more common place with people getting in trouble.
I have a 4 Pro and I love it. Especially the 360º photos. They take a decent chunk of battery (all the photos + processing) but they are stitched 100% seamlessly. It's quite amazing how this little buddy has done what I never could archive with the Google Camera + the disappeared 360 option.
I've owned the first two versions of the Inspire, and honestly, the mini 2 has been my favorite and what I take with me to every shoot now. Not only because it can come with me anywhere, but the difference in quality is almost unnoticeable to the untrained eye. Also there is a lot less of a stress factor having a couple hundred dollar drone vs a couple thousand dollar drone expecially when filming in dense locations.
I live in the EU and have the same drone. You still have to register it and have the number on it because it has a camera. The only thing you don't need for it is a license.
Cool! I'm actually headed to Kenya next year so good to know about drone regs there. I have the DJI Mini 2 and when I purchased it, it was required that I register it with the FAA in the US even though it was at or below the 249g limit...just so folks are aware. (I think they started requiring that because the smaller drones have become so popular.). Even the Mini 2 is an amazing machine and the registration process was really pretty easy.
Just remember Jerry here in the USA if you use your drone for a business you will need to register it no matter what. Also if you are using it in furtherance of a business/making money or for Nonprofit you will need a part 107 license from the FAA. Good thing is the license is pretty easy to study for and pass. I got a 97%. Failure to do so can bring on a hefty fine from the FAA. The cost of the license is currently $175 and I do recommend an online course such as Altitude University. But if you want to try a free course there are a few options.
This is fantastic advice. Recently in my country (Canada) the police in a city near Toronto flew their drone into a flight path of a airport and crashed into a Cessna. It's crazy to think even a certified pilot and agency could screw up so bad, but even among pro's there's a lot of ways to make mistakes. Luckily DJI won't let us normal people make such a bad mistake but the police don't get lockouts so they really need to know their stuff. These smaller drones can do SO much what a bigger drone can do but in a much safer fashion. Always read up on the laws, do the course and listen not for the grade but for the knowledge. PS: Nobody got hurt but the poor Cessna and the drone was no more. It could've easily been a national/international headline if they had hit the plane in a different way. Especially in a urban place like it was.
Drone regulations are constantly changing now a days. We all want less headaches when it comes to flying our drones and getting the shots we want for our creations, but we have to take the time and research the regs as to where we are going. Thank you @JerryRigEverything for posting this video. Hopefully it will serve to remind us, check it out before hand. Also, in the part where the gimal got stuck, I think it was mentioned in another post, but you can use the map instead of the camera to navigate back with. Also, you may or may not want to check out the Mini 4 pro that's out now!! Thanks for all the work you do, on youtube and in other countries as well!!
Since January 2024 in the EU there a new drone regulartories put in place. These mean: Everything above C0 class does incooperate automatic tracking features - on RF so basically they drones are constantly sharing your position (not just that of the drone - the remote) with the officials (few miles). Good luck with that! Next up will be C0 ... somehow understandable but also somehow crazy regulatory shit they're doing nowadays ... maybe the only way to combat potential drone thread (and its a real thing, considering what these things are capable off with their sensors).
I almost ran into this problem while visiting Greece recently. Even with the Mini 2 you will want to go through the registration process. They are not big on perceived privacy violations so they regulate their use (much more so in the bigger landlocked areas) strictly.
Usually Greece wants to charge you a fee to register almost everything. I would ask to see the regulations which MUST be passed by parliament. If they cannot provide you with the exact law then is BS! It boils down to greasing the palms of local law enforcement. A typical third world country.
this video should be sponsor. Very informative with good footage. All the best in your ventures. I have both drones mentioned and take them both wherever I go.
I own the same drone... its pretty awesome! I debated a larger drone, but I read/saw a lot of horror stories where people ended up arrested or chased by random people so I figured the smaller one would be best. I love it so far.
Apart from the wonderful flying,footage,recommendation/promotion,its quite the impressive how u combined n joined ALL those various locations shots seamlessly like u travelled on a single day...very precisely planned,just for Dji...never flew any drones,but now u got me hooked...
I'm happy watching you travelling all over the world, completing all those exciting projects. Only few people have the opportunity to have a job they love! Also my respect to your wife for "letting" you stay away for so long...🙂
Not only register, he has to have a flying license in Europe to be allowed to fly a drone. Then he has to file a flight plan, wait for permits and not deviate from the plan. Just as he would have to do when flying a helicopter or plane in the same area. Not even the fire departments or rescue services are allowed to just fly wherever they want. And certainly not with a large drone. It all depends on the size and speed of the drone. Not the speed flown, the speed the drone is capable.
@@wolfgangpreier9160 with a small drone (above 250 grams and below 1 kilo's I think) you don't need to file a flight plan, you just need to have drone certificate
@@truescotsman4103 the large size (not the one in the video) is a concern if it falls out of the sky. It's treated the same as other aircraft/helicopters.
I was really tempted to buy this drone as an upgrade from the Mini 2, but decided to go with the DJI Air 2 S instead, get my advanced Canadian drone license and try to get into a little drone business besides using it just for my RUclips videos. I'm now starting stage 3 of that plan and so far I'm very glad I got a bigger drone. The way it flies even in strong wind is really incredible. I'll get a Mini 3 Pro when I make enough money, because like you said, it is the only drone of its caliber that you can fly almost anywhere. I flew my Mini 2 in Mexico many times and it is ideal for travel. Good video. Thanks for sharing.
Congratulations on the Advanced! Was it very difficult? And did you attend a flight school before you attempted the exam? I'm in western Canada and I've been considering going for my advanced now that I have my basic. Thanks 🙏🏻
@@willpowerfpv3246 Thank you! I'm in Alberta myself.I found the online test hard and studied a lot for it, using Don Joyce's videos. You only get one hour and need to score at least 80 % correct. The flight review went well, but again I studied the material and prepared the required material in a binder, not just the app. So no, I never attended any course. My cost for this was probably around $ 250, everything included (except the drone), right down to the dollar store cones and first aid kit I brought along 😆(they want to make sure you have safety in mind and can fly your drone). I brought my better half with me to act as a visual observer.
@@the1andonly Awesome, thank you! Great idea to go overboard with the safety aspect. I know a lot of times it's less about the actual material than it is about their perception of you. I also used Don's material to get ready for the basic. I have some if impediments about absorbing information from legal jargon, but I did get the same score as Don did, so I was pleased with that. 😅 How to look at flight school last week, and apparently it's getting popular since it was around $600 last year and doubled to $1200 this year from the one school that I was looking at. I haven't shopped around but I assume they're all fairly similarly priced. Maybe I'll start studying for it, take a crack at it and see how I do. Thanks for the reply, happy flying!
@@willpowerfpv3246 You can't go wrong! If you screw up the online exam it can only teach you something. The cost for that is just ten bucks! I was prepared for that, but squeezed by with an 82 % score 😊
In Germany you as the pilot need to be registered with your registration ID stuck on the drone. So that everyone knows its your drone when you crash it somewhere
A tip for landing and taking off - I do this in and out of my hands. I do this by letting go when I’m in take off mode and in landing mode catching it and it will automatically stop when it gets resistance. This prevents the drone from being in the dirt/dust/sand or wet ground.
The quality of images and drones in the smaller class is so good that there has to be a very good reason to fly a larger one. I fly in mountains, often in quite windy weather; the Mini 3SE copes with all of it, at a very cheap price. Also so easy to carry over the shoulder. Nice footage1
No, in Canada you need license and insurance to fly in Canada over 250grams period. You cannot fly near people or anywhere close to an airdrome. (the whole of Toronto is airdromes for reference) The rules in Canada are bad.
@@yourimpossibletoisgn That is partially not true at all. You need a drone pilot certificate and you need to register your drone for drones above 250g. If you are flying for sport or recreation, then you don't need insurance.
Zimbabwean drone pilot here...regulation varies by classification, and the smaller the drone, the less strict the regulation by class. However, here we still need a letter of approval and registration for every drone, and an RPL for the pilot. More drone related content is welcome!
take note, its the same in singapore, if you dont have a license u cant fly it. i think thats why you dont see ANYONE flying a drone here after the law was enacted,
It's likely that the gimbal got stuck from hitting the sand and the g force spike affecting the control filtering software (simplified). Should have power-cycled it before flying over water, that would recalibrate it. Also using the map rather than the camera can help you navigate back 😊
Bro you don’t know how rich this guy is.. he has a good heart and all but let’s not forget he buys a drone like that as if it were pocket change so the happiness of the little kids outweighs the cost if it breaks..
Ok... So you were "arrested" or detained for flying some other drone, not this one. Why does the title say that you were ARRESTED for flying this drone? Which u clearly were not my friend 🤔 (Apparently Clickbait is still a thing)
You are still arrested when you are detained. Also where he was detained was probably at the police station so yes you can say you were arrested and detained as he would have been handcuffed and also escorted to the police station.
Zach, have you looked into manual controlled fpv drones before? I think it would be worth your time to do some digging. I fly recreationally and I have like 3 times as much fun flying those then dji quads. Nice video, gotta love the cool tech
@@travellinman382 no all you gotta do is create an Alphatango account, pass the quizz to be approved and recieve the licence, then you register your drone
@@nibor_2.0 I just went on a French drone site. If the drone has a camera, you must be registered as a drone pilot and are required to have an EU UAS pilot license. Sounds like a lot of hassle just to film my friends villa and vineyards.
It's great that your attitude lets you take things to the limit. Flying the mini in medium type rain to me would have been risky. Thanks for opening my already open eyes a little bit more!
pro tip is also, if youre going to another country, check laws according to what ur planning to do there etc. taking for granted that it works like in ur own country can turn out bad, even like a small thing as flying a drone somewhere. be careful
Something I have to wonder... When the police approached you, how did it go down? Did they ask if you had it registered, and when you said no you got arrested? Or did they just immediately arrest you and ask if it was registered later?
Also, if flying in Europe, you need to stick your license number onto the drone. I suppose that the police officer had him show the drone. No sticker, no permit.
Yea something isn’t adding up with this. Why was they acting like that about the drone in the first place? Your allowed to fly a drone. Why did the detain him? What made them come and find him
You definitely get used to it! I have a DJI mini 2 and it's very confidence inspiring. I once flew it quite far down an estuary to get a shot and it completely lost signal (there were too many trees and buildings in between me and it). But it just ascends to the height you pre set and then fly's back to you on its own. They also use GPS to hover so it doesn't just drift on its own. Think I paid £70 for insurance for 2 years through DJI too, so helps build confidence while you're learning
And that's the other thing. I'd have to drop a decent amount of money, because the only one worth buying would have to be one that has legit sensors and GPS to keep me out of trouble. One that the return to home feature actually works lol
I am curous about your experience. So how did they know the weight of your drone? How did they know if it was registered or not? Did they just ask you to land it? What if you simply didnt see them and flew away - did they know where you were? What if you were moving? If you are in a car - most countries don't let the police pull you over just to see what they can find and detain you they need probable cause.
If you want to fly in Europe, you need a license for the respective drone class, special insurance and the drone must be registered! You are also only allowed to fly within visual range. So not kilometers away. Penalties can sometimes cost up to 20000 euros. The police simply wait until you have to land and then check you. There is a more relaxed regulation for drones under 250g.
I used to build and fly RC aircraft. With the new rules and regulations, they are acting as if you are able to carry nukes on a sub 1 pound drone! My aircraft weighed up to 5 pounds with fuel and radio equipment on board. No cameras or packages of any kind. And we flew from small unregulated airports! They have taken a sport for kids and adults, and turned it into a highly regulated business for no reason other than 'security theater'. There is no danger to people or property when flown with common sense, and when the Karens are kept at bay...
The hardest thing about flying a drone is trying to figure out if a flight is legal or not. So many laws about drones. National laws, state laws, county laws, township laws, neighborhood hoa regulations!! It's ridiculous sometimes.
Should note you need a part 107 (I believe it is) license before yt police turns you in ...if you don't have one already 😉 I thinks it's if you profit in any shape from drones or their footage. You need a commercial license and remote ID
The way to avoid problems: Never fly drones from a place where you are accessible or visible. And never EVER talk about drones around 'drone guys' or 'radio guys', those two types of people will rat you out to the feds ASAP. I've flown in a country that has draconian laws with impunity for about 15+ years (and other RC before that). I have been flying planes since I was 13, so the thought of someone giving me grief over a literal childrens toy tier drone is so irritating that I just avoid it altogether.
European drone pilot here. The new EU regulation on drones is pretty good, because at first every country in Europe had their own set of rules. However the rules are strict, and yes bigger drones need registration. Even though I am registered, I have the recreational A1-3 licenses and I fly Mavic series drones, I almost completely stopped doing that and my go to drone is now also the Mini 3 Pro. Less rules, more opportunities.
How many km You get until signal gets weak? I got like 2.1km outside in open field and signal was very weak.
@@Ruslan_davudov_photography You don't, because in the EU, BVLOS isn't allowed outside of the VLOS and with a spotter.
@@Galileocrafter Thats what i was thinking, it sucks tho, thanks
@@Galileocrafter so you get an obstacle between you and the drone and the drone crashes to the ground?
@@OrloxPhoenix it does not crash, but the signal will be noticeably weaker.
That was a hell of an advertisement for it not to be sponsored! Honestly I was surprised when you said it wasn't sponsored. DJI should retroactively pay you for this 😂
kind of bs anyway. you cant compare big drones to small drones. its like comparing a cellphone to a real camera. The sensor is tiny all the details and depth is washed away and the image is smoothed out to compensate.
Cellphones use tricks to fool you into believing the picture is better than it is which is also the case for drones.
If you wanna fly around for fun get a small drone. if you actually want to use the footage in any kind of professional production you need the big boy to fit a real camera.
It is not a replacement and never will be they are different kind of products meant for different things.
He is sneaky :D he put affiliate link in the description :D but you said it well they should have sponsored him either way :D
@@Nickerian91 FACTS
its just an referral affiliate link, still kinda sponsored imo
@@Nickerian91 well, we see the 4k footage here and it's not that bad...
I love it!! Thank you for the work you did in Kenya brother and also interacting with local kids 💯
Where was the arrest you said just to get views pretty sneaky!
Arrested and detained are two different things.
Not free to go is not free to go
@@jacobfernandez6055 Say what you mean and mean what you say....
@@PhantomPanic he said arrested and meant arrested. What do you think arrested means?
And arrested/detained and charged are also two different things
Arrested means that you're processed into the system, incarcerated, given a court date. Detained means you were held and questioned but not processed. A traffic stop is an example of being detained. If they find something criminal during the detained you can then be arrested and booked into jail @jacobfernandez6055
One thing to note while flying in weather is that if you're flying above a layer of fog and start descending through the fog, the landing sensor thinks that thick fog is actually the ground and starts initiating an auto landing. That's one way to soil your undies. I had to repeatedly lower altitude, cancel the auto landing, lower altitude etc etc about 20 times until it was all the way through the fog layer. I have no idea what it would have done if I didn't cancel the auto landing. (I hope the answer is that it would have just kept descending but never turn off the props because it never sensed that it stopped descending, but I wasn't about to find out).
My Mavic 2 did just that, it just keeps descending very slowly until it is on the actual ground
I was filming fog over a river. I had to fight mine from auto landing in the water. Not a fun experience to say the least.
I can confirm. I almost we my undies the same way. But if you let it auto land, it will keep descending until it feels the ground, it won't just shut off the propellers out of the blue. It was an intense experience.
Get the dji refresh care, then you won’t mind that much anymore ;)
You can turn off the bottom sensors to let you descend no problem. I've flown above fog layers many times and land no problem.
Crazy that Zach can teleport like he does!!
I've got the same one and love it. It's great not having to worry about registering it in a lot of locations.
I don't believe you!
@@quietflintuk Oh no! What ever will Matt do?
@@dontbanmebrodontbanme5403 Undecided...
Have you used it a lot for B-roll and other footage in your videos? Any projects down the road that you're planning on using it?
Love your channel by the way! You make great content and it makes me happy seeing your channel grow :)
Be careful though. Here in Germany for example you also have to register UAV under 250g if they have a camera. It's just 20€ though if you're a private persion and 50$ for commercial.
To clarify: In the USA, even with a sub 250 gram drone, when using it commercially (like on this monetized channel) you will need to register the drone AND you will also need your FAA 107 certificate. The only time you don't need to register your drone is if it is less than 250 grams AND you are only flying recreationally. Happy flying!
I was just going to say this.
not classed as commercial
The problem I have with this is how can you prove intentions of commercial or recreational use?
I could be in full work clothing and if I policeman happens to ask I could simply say “ I’m not being paid for this, nor am I working right now, this is simply for fun, I just happen to be in work clothing.”
Yes, so Jerry should have a Part 107 Drone Pilot license since he films for his for-profit RUclips channel.
@@keddx2 You go ahead and take those chances with the FAA and the FEDERAL GOVT. lmao
thank you for this video!!! ive been enjoying your channel/ tech testing for over 6 years now.
Hmm, it's a little more complicated than that in the US. Everything you said about sub 250g drones is correct for a recreational flyer, but filming for a monetized RUclips channel means you need a part 107 license, and flying part 107 means the drone must be registered no matter what size it is.
Indeed. So many RUclipsrs seem to not realize this, or just don't care. I think its a silly law, but it's still the law.
I hate to say this because I believe you should be right, but as of this moment RUclipsrs can fall into a grey area. If they are filming content for their RUclips channel it’s still considered recreational flying in part 107 eyes. I’d say in a couple years I’d say the laws will catch up and RUclipsrs will fall under 107 but currently they do not.
@@-b1ghorn087 The unfortunate truth is that if you are uploading it to RUclips it would be considered commercial, as you do have the potential of making money from that. My personal opinion is that it is a misguided law that will only make drones less safe (They have to target 249g to make it on the consumer market, meaning less sensors for collision detection and shorter flight time) and more impractical to use. I hope that one day the law is relaxed to allow greater innovation with consumer drones.
I also noticed that he said it was hard to recover when his gimbal stuck. Technically in the USA, you’re not supposed to fly out of sight, although I do it all the time too.😂
@@---capybara--- part 107 has nothing to do with commercial anything. I had that mistaken impression for a long time. I take pictures with my drone and put them on canvas frames and sell them from time to time when somebody likes them. Mostly scenery stuff. I do not have nor need a part 107 because it’s all about intent. I take pictures because it’s fun and I enjoy it. But if somebody comes along and sees one of my pictures and says I really like it will you sell it I do. RUclips is kind of the same thing. People make content with drones for RUclips because they want to. It’s not exactly a for profit guaranteed job exactly. Nobody is coming to them and says I’ll pay you x if you do such and such with your drone. They do what they want and upload it to RUclips recreationally and if they make a little money from it then good deal. It’s a very confusing topic. FYI until I took pilot institutes part 107 course from Greg I was under the same impression. I specifically had a conversation with the instructor and he explained to me the actual way it is. He verified my situation was legal and didn’t need part 107. He also gave me an example of if you were flying a drone and video’s something happen an you post it on social medias or whatever and a news channel contacts saying they would like to pay you to use it on the evening news for a story you are perfectly legal because 1. Your intent of the original flight was recreational and 2. You weren’t commissioned upfront for the flight.
Zack is the only person who can make a sponsored style video without it needing to be sponsored.
I don’t think Dji sponsor RUclipsrs
@@teebu that's not an affiliate link
@@BrianGlaze how does one tell if a post amazon link is an affiliate link?
@@jadesluv You can tell because affiliate links have special urls that incorporate the creator's name or brand. Also, RUclips regulation says that affiliate links have to be stated as such.
Hi Zach, been watching your channel for 7 years. Glad to watch your videos again.
I bought a drone yesterday and I am from Germany. Yes, theoretically, every drone needs to be registered, no matter the weight. You also need to have an insurance cover for any damage you could cause. You also need a licence for drones over 250g.
That's some commitment to proper content right there. Creating a script and filming the respective pieces literally all around the world. This video SHOULD be sponsored, I guess DJI wouldn't pay a video team for ads to travel around the globe.
In the US you must register your drone if you are using it for any type of profit. Including youtube video's if they are monetized.
Actually if the aircraft is over 250 grams, you have to register it in the US
If you want to profit you need a license.
As a drone pilot, I really appreciate you making this content. It's becoming an issue that anyone can purchase a very capable drone online or from any box store, go home and charge the battery and be trained by an app how to fly it within a few hours, and circumvent any knowledge of how to fly safely and legally.
I'll admit, I actually did the same thing a few years ago with the original Mavic Mini, but it wasn't my flavor, so I sold it and got into building DIY FPV quadcopters. This required a lot of time, money and effort, and along the way, interacting with a large community of enthusiasts that promote safety and legal flying as a priority. Government regulations are now making it more difficult for us hobbyists to fly, and the main reasons are casual fliers with no understanding of their violations, AND large corporations wanting to harness that same airspace for their own businesses, like drone delivery.
I'm in Canada, but I'm now licensed and have registered my +250g rigs with Transport Canada, and closely follow new imposed regulations, such as Remote ID. If we don't follow the basic laws and clamp down on safety issues, we're going to be regulated out of the sky, in favor of big business.
I'm not a bootlicker, I just love my hobby, and don't want to see it die, so please, everyone do your part to, at the very least, be smart about flying, so we can all enjoy this incredible technology, and the joy of "flight". 😁✌🏻
Compliance leads to overreach, bootlicker.
Is under 250g legal in Canada, maybe Ontario? Not sure if it's a provincial law.
It's still amazing that for 1K+tax we can get an FPV drone like this to learn how to fly and shoot good quality video.
I would still study what the rules are; it's not the Wild West.
@@OviWanKeno9i absolutely man, it is legal below 250g to fly without a license or registration. It's kind of considered a toy in the eyes of the government, but you still have to follow the same safety and privacy laws as you would with a larger drone, and your local areas may have bylaws a boat flying in certain places. I live in a small town in Alberta, and there are no drone signs at some of the local park attractions, so I usually end up flying at like a schoolyard or an empty lot. Those minis are so capable, they're an absolute blast. The only thing I would take into consideration is how windy it is in your area. When they get that small and light, they sometimes have trouble fighting strong winds, like above 25 km an hour. And the higher you go in the sky, the stronger the wind is on any given day.
I've been thinking about getting another one just because they're such a excellent machine to have in the tool bag. 🙂
I stopped flying my drone because it became WAY too strict in my area to do so.
@@airtec87 sorry to hear that, man. Are you living close to restricted airspace? There is a lot of instances where law enforcement will tell you you can't fly something, when they don't actually have jurisdiction. They can only instruct you that you can not launch or land in certain areas, but they don't have any jurisdiction over airspace. That's for transport Canada to decide. I know what you mean tho, I don't like getting into disputes with people, sometimes it's easier to just find a different location. I found that most people don't know the law anyways, which is why I got my basic license. You can diffuse 95% of the situations by just telling them that you have a license, I which point they mostly assume that you know the laws better than they do.
Thanks for being honest about this, hopefully fellow RUclipsrs around the world will listen to your words as it affects the entire community. With the remote ID aspect taking effect soon enough this is only going to be more common place with people getting in trouble.
Oh man, Im from Germany and trust me, Germany is no good place to fly a drone!
I have a 4 Pro and I love it. Especially the 360º photos. They take a decent chunk of battery (all the photos + processing) but they are stitched 100% seamlessly. It's quite amazing how this little buddy has done what I never could archive with the Google Camera + the disappeared 360 option.
I love how this wasn’t a durability test, but you still managed to get some sand in there
I don't like sand. It's coarse and rough and irritating... and it gets everywhere
@@sshah2545 I don't like sandy surfaces but it's because of a crazy ex of mine. Ha ha.
and rain, don't forget the rain.
@@sshah2545 Anakin that’s you? lol
I've owned the first two versions of the Inspire, and honestly, the mini 2 has been my favorite and what I take with me to every shoot now. Not only because it can come with me anywhere, but the difference in quality is almost unnoticeable to the untrained eye. Also there is a lot less of a stress factor having a couple hundred dollar drone vs a couple thousand dollar drone expecially when filming in dense locations.
I live in the EU and have the same drone. You still have to register it and have the number on it because it has a camera. The only thing you don't need for it is a license.
Insurance is mandatory as well
Cool! I'm actually headed to Kenya next year so good to know about drone regs there. I have the DJI Mini 2 and when I purchased it, it was required that I register it with the FAA in the US even though it was at or below the 249g limit...just so folks are aware. (I think they started requiring that because the smaller drones have become so popular.). Even the Mini 2 is an amazing machine and the registration process was really pretty easy.
i love how this is always smiling when he talks
he's super psyched on life and flying drones and traveling
Just remember Jerry here in the USA if you use your drone for a business you will need to register it no matter what. Also if you are using it in furtherance of a business/making money or for
Nonprofit you will need a part 107 license from the FAA. Good thing is the license is pretty easy to study for and pass. I got a 97%. Failure to do so can bring on a hefty fine from the FAA. The cost of the license is currently $175 and I do recommend an online course such as Altitude University. But if you want to try a free course there are a few options.
I wish I was arrested for flying my drone, instead I watched $3k fly off into the horizon. 😂
Ouch. 3k hurts especially when you're forced to watch it's demise.
Congrats
Ouch!!!!!😱😱😱
what drone costs 3k that didn't have failsafe's? was this a long time ago before tech got to that point?
@@Algorythmfpvit was probably his fault
This is fantastic advice. Recently in my country (Canada) the police in a city near Toronto flew their drone into a flight path of a airport and crashed into a Cessna. It's crazy to think even a certified pilot and agency could screw up so bad, but even among pro's there's a lot of ways to make mistakes. Luckily DJI won't let us normal people make such a bad mistake but the police don't get lockouts so they really need to know their stuff. These smaller drones can do SO much what a bigger drone can do but in a much safer fashion. Always read up on the laws, do the course and listen not for the grade but for the knowledge. PS: Nobody got hurt but the poor Cessna and the drone was no more. It could've easily been a national/international headline if they had hit the plane in a different way. Especially in a urban place like it was.
Toronto Police or the Goofs Royale du Canada?
we all make mistakes
the Mini 4 Pro comes out on Monday. I think I'm going to pull the trigger. Can't wait to watch the rest of your videos.
Drone regulations are constantly changing now a days. We all want less headaches when it comes to flying our drones and getting the shots we want for our creations, but we have to take the time and research the regs as to where we are going. Thank you @JerryRigEverything for posting this video. Hopefully it will serve to remind us, check it out before hand. Also, in the part where the gimal got stuck, I think it was mentioned in another post, but you can use the map instead of the camera to navigate back with. Also, you may or may not want to check out the Mini 4 pro that's out now!! Thanks for all the work you do, on youtube and in other countries as well!!
Map and RTH to return. It is better to have an automatic takeoff to have a safe RTH!
Since January 2024 in the EU there a new drone regulartories put in place. These mean: Everything above C0 class does incooperate automatic tracking features - on RF so basically they drones are constantly sharing your position (not just that of the drone - the remote) with the officials (few miles). Good luck with that! Next up will be C0 ... somehow understandable but also somehow crazy regulatory shit they're doing nowadays ... maybe the only way to combat potential drone thread (and its a real thing, considering what these things are capable off with their sensors).
What amazing things you've been doing. It literally can't be said enough, we're thankful for people like you in this world
I almost ran into this problem while visiting Greece recently. Even with the Mini 2 you will want to go through the registration process. They are not big on perceived privacy violations so they regulate their use (much more so in the bigger landlocked areas) strictly.
Usually Greece wants to charge you a fee to register almost everything. I would ask to see the regulations which MUST be passed by parliament. If they cannot provide you with the exact law then is BS! It boils down to greasing the palms of local law enforcement. A typical third world country.
How did you register it for use in the EU? I'm traveling to Portugal and I was wondering how the process works.
Can we get more videos of Jerry on a golf course?
For sure. I'd play... but I don't wanna make Lincoln look bad.
What's inside Jerry statue when is video coming
@@JerryRigEverything 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣Lincoln he`s Pro I believe in him I doubt you
@@JerryRigEverything Shots fired!!!
no
this video should be sponsor. Very informative with good footage. All the best in your ventures. I have both drones mentioned and take them both wherever I go.
I own the same drone... its pretty awesome! I debated a larger drone, but I read/saw a lot of horror stories where people ended up arrested or chased by random people so I figured the smaller one would be best. I love it so far.
Apart from the wonderful flying,footage,recommendation/promotion,its quite the impressive how u combined n joined ALL those various locations shots seamlessly like u travelled on a single day...very precisely planned,just for Dji...never flew any drones,but now u got me hooked...
start with fpv and you'll never go for mavics. sure it takes time to practice but it is worth every hour!!!
I'm happy watching you travelling all over the world, completing all those exciting projects. Only few people have the opportunity to have a job they love! Also my respect to your wife for "letting" you stay away for so long...🙂
I didn’t think zack would stoop this low with click bait
"Safe enough... no people... I flew over a group of police officers" - I see what you did there. Cops aren't people. XD
Greetings from Germany 😂 Drones are very Hard in Germany so many rules...
Always tricky knowing when you're able to fly. Especially if you have to register a drone.
The mini 3 pro looks great
Not only register, he has to have a flying license in Europe to be allowed to fly a drone. Then he has to file a flight plan, wait for permits and not deviate from the plan. Just as he would have to do when flying a helicopter or plane in the same area. Not even the fire departments or rescue services are allowed to just fly wherever they want. And certainly not with a large drone. It all depends on the size and speed of the drone. Not the speed flown, the speed the drone is capable.
@@wolfgangpreier9160 with a small drone (above 250 grams and below 1 kilo's I think) you don't need to file a flight plan, you just need to have drone certificate
Why are we arresting someone for something like this? Seems more like a traffic infraction than anything else.
@@wolfgangpreier9160HAHA what the F! I will fly my drone anywhere anytime without any permissions. The european regulators can kiss my ass.
@@truescotsman4103 the large size (not the one in the video) is a concern if it falls out of the sky. It's treated the same as other aircraft/helicopters.
I was really tempted to buy this drone as an upgrade from the Mini 2, but decided to go with the DJI Air 2 S instead, get my advanced Canadian drone license and try to get into a little drone business besides using it just for my RUclips videos. I'm now starting stage 3 of that plan and so far I'm very glad I got a bigger drone. The way it flies even in strong wind is really incredible. I'll get a Mini 3 Pro when I make enough money, because like you said, it is the only drone of its caliber that you can fly almost anywhere. I flew my Mini 2 in Mexico many times and it is ideal for travel. Good video. Thanks for sharing.
Congratulations on the Advanced! Was it very difficult? And did you attend a flight school before you attempted the exam?
I'm in western Canada and I've been considering going for my advanced now that I have my basic. Thanks 🙏🏻
@@willpowerfpv3246 Thank you! I'm in Alberta myself.I found the online test hard and studied a lot for it, using Don Joyce's videos. You only get one hour and need to score at least 80 % correct. The flight review went well, but again I studied the material and prepared the required material in a binder, not just the app. So no, I never attended any course. My cost for this was probably around $ 250, everything included (except the drone), right down to the dollar store cones and first aid kit I brought along 😆(they want to make sure you have safety in mind and can fly your drone). I brought my better half with me to act as a visual observer.
@@the1andonly Awesome, thank you! Great idea to go overboard with the safety aspect. I know a lot of times it's less about the actual material than it is about their perception of you.
I also used Don's material to get ready for the basic. I have some if impediments about absorbing information from legal jargon, but I did get the same score as Don did, so I was pleased with that. 😅
How to look at flight school last week, and apparently it's getting popular since it was around $600 last year and doubled to $1200 this year from the one school that I was looking at. I haven't shopped around but I assume they're all fairly similarly priced. Maybe I'll start studying for it, take a crack at it and see how I do. Thanks for the reply, happy flying!
@@willpowerfpv3246 You can't go wrong! If you screw up the online exam it can only teach you something. The cost for that is just ten bucks! I was prepared for that, but squeezed by with an 82 % score 😊
You and Cambry are doing a lot of great work for a lot of people. Definitely keep Jerry Rigging Everything!
Great for you and yes the Mini3 Pro is the best one from DJI so far 👌👍 Keep Up Your good work my New Droning Brother Cheers 🍻 Mate 🍺🍺🤘👌
In Germany you as the pilot need to be registered with your registration ID stuck on the drone. So that everyone knows its your drone when you crash it somewhere
A tip for landing and taking off - I do this in and out of my hands. I do this by letting go when I’m in take off mode and in landing mode catching it and it will automatically stop when it gets resistance. This prevents the drone from being in the dirt/dust/sand or wet ground.
You do that as long as you got no accident where you nearly broke a finger doin so.
The quality of images and drones in the smaller class is so good that there has to be a very good reason to fly a larger one. I fly in mountains, often in quite windy weather; the Mini 3SE copes with all of it, at a very cheap price. Also so easy to carry over the shoulder. Nice footage1
Am I the only one who saw far beyond the drone but the work you are doing for the needy. God bless you
I hope you aren't drown.
You rock! Glad I found your channel. I also love the DJI mini's ever since i got a mini 2
0:50 Detained, not arrested.
🤓
Detained - free to leave? Er no!........Arrested - free to leave? Er no!
Every year drone laws get more onerous and ridiculous and it is killing the hobby
liberals
The Mini 3 Pro was a really nice upgrade over the Mini 2 (which I picked up last year). It's incredible how capable these little machines really are!
Very iniformative and I appreciate your humility !!
In Canada you also need a license to fly drones over a certain size and when flying in public spaces.
No, in Canada you need license and insurance to fly in Canada over 250grams period. You cannot fly near people or anywhere close to an airdrome. (the whole of Toronto is airdromes for reference)
The rules in Canada are bad.
@@yourimpossibletoisgn That is partially not true at all. You need a drone pilot certificate and you need to register your drone for drones above 250g. If you are flying for sport or recreation, then you don't need insurance.
@@yourimpossibletoisgn for small drones Canada is good. No vlos required
@@yourimpossibletoisgn everything in Canada is bad
Of course its Canada, you need a permit to leave your house there
Lol my first thought after reading the title was "why, have you been in Germany..". :D
Zimbabwean drone pilot here...regulation varies by classification, and the smaller the drone, the less strict the regulation by class. However, here we still need a letter of approval and registration for every drone, and an RPL for the pilot. More drone related content is welcome!
Oh man, I am extra careful with my drone and here you are just using it without a care in the world... I admire that. Good Job!🤘
The great part of the video is the Kid's smile, thanks Jerry for the video! 💖
You know it's not clickbait on this channel when he said he got arrested
The smiles/joy you put on those kids faces ❤
Still needs to be registered if you are using it for work related purposes.
A man who properly uses the word gimble! In boats, some of our stoves are gimbled. Who would have known there are gimbles in the sky? GLORIOUS!!!
take note, its the same in singapore, if you dont have a license u cant fly it.
i think thats why you dont see ANYONE flying a drone here after the law was enacted,
2:56 why this truck driver was determined to run over these trees?
It's likely that the gimbal got stuck from hitting the sand and the g force spike affecting the control filtering software (simplified). Should have power-cycled it before flying over water, that would recalibrate it.
Also using the map rather than the camera can help you navigate back 😊
Hey it's Mr. Clean!
Nah 💀
What a beautiful shot of those kids chasing the drone. Amazing!
Awesome, thanks. And thank you for what you do for the kids in Kenya
You are such a calm guy. I would be so scared to see all the kids trying to take my drone once i land it. 😅
Exactly the same thing I thought!
Bro you don’t know how rich this guy is.. he has a good heart and all but let’s not forget he buys a drone like that as if it were pocket change so the happiness of the little kids outweighs the cost if it breaks..
1:50 …..that beautiful pristine pool water👀
"ALERT!, FUN!, Fun! We see someone having fun" -cops
Ok... So you were "arrested" or detained for flying some other drone, not this one. Why does the title say that you were ARRESTED for flying this drone? Which u clearly were not my friend 🤔 (Apparently Clickbait is still a thing)
You are still arrested when you are detained. Also where he was detained was probably at the police station so yes you can say you were arrested and detained as he would have been handcuffed and also escorted to the police station.
@@dloc116 Thanks for that
Something about videos of Kenya makes me very happy. I think it’s all the smiles.
Zach, have you looked into manual controlled fpv drones before? I think it would be worth your time to do some digging. I fly recreationally and I have like 3 times as much fun flying those then dji quads. Nice video, gotta love the cool tech
1:38, yep that things now broken.
Fr they gonna eat that up
In france, if your drone has a camera it gotta be registered and it's illegal to fly in cities
Who do you register it with? Local Gendarmerie?
@@travellinman382 no all you gotta do is create an Alphatango account, pass the quizz to be approved and recieve the licence, then you register your drone
@@travellinman382 but idk if it also work lile that in others countries
@@nibor_2.0 I just went on a French drone site. If the drone has a camera, you must be registered as a drone pilot and are required to have an EU UAS pilot license. Sounds like a lot of hassle just to film my friends villa and vineyards.
Lol france...
It's great that your attitude lets you take things to the limit. Flying the mini in medium type rain to me would have been risky. Thanks for opening my already open eyes a little bit more!
1:33 Were you panicking with all those kids grabbing and fighting over your drone? lol
Germany really bullied em into an unsponsored ad lmao
You would be amazed by what these drones can handle Zack. They are extremely durable and in our opinion over-engineered for a consumer product.
No way, love your durability test videos! Please collab with JerryRigEverthing
Glad your ok . We need you!
Getting in trouble for flying a drone when there's a self-driving car is kind of funny.
This was awesome to see the excitement on these children's faces when you flew this drone in Kenya.
Jerry is the only IT channel I know who gets arrested over flying a drone, this man is wild
When your a celeb you get arrested🤣🤣
NALF had the same experience.
pro tip is also, if youre going to another country, check laws according to what ur planning to do there etc. taking for granted that it works like in ur own country can turn out bad, even like a small thing as flying a drone somewhere. be careful
Try that for Germany and you are more irritated then before. There are so many stupid laws :)
@@keinstarinvestortypical anal Germans, they will never get out of that Goose Step philosophy……
Something I have to wonder... When the police approached you, how did it go down? Did they ask if you had it registered, and when you said no you got arrested? Or did they just immediately arrest you and ask if it was registered later?
That’s an interesting question but I do know according to the faa you have to produce the proper drone documentation if asked by law enforcement
Also, if flying in Europe, you need to stick your license number onto the drone. I suppose that the police officer had him show the drone. No sticker, no permit.
Yea something isn’t adding up with this. Why was they acting like that about the drone in the first place? Your allowed to fly a drone. Why did the detain him? What made them come and find him
@@sky_fpv7529 In EU its forbidden to fly in many places, especially cities if you dont have special permissions and tier 2 licence.
Nice! I have one just like it....do almost all my flying over water since I live on a ski lake in Florida! Love it!
I absolutely LOVE the footage of the children! So cool!
Of course it was Germany...😒
I've been really wanting to get into drones... I'm just terrified at the thought of sending all that money up in the air 😂
You definitely get used to it! I have a DJI mini 2 and it's very confidence inspiring. I once flew it quite far down an estuary to get a shot and it completely lost signal (there were too many trees and buildings in between me and it). But it just ascends to the height you pre set and then fly's back to you on its own. They also use GPS to hover so it doesn't just drift on its own. Think I paid £70 for insurance for 2 years through DJI too, so helps build confidence while you're learning
always start with something small to learn on, I learned on a tello, then got a mavic 2 zoom.
And that's the other thing. I'd have to drop a decent amount of money, because the only one worth buying would have to be one that has legit sensors and GPS to keep me out of trouble. One that the return to home feature actually works lol
I am curous about your experience. So how did they know the weight of your drone? How did they know if it was registered or not? Did they just ask you to land it? What if you simply didnt see them and flew away - did they know where you were? What if you were moving? If you are in a car - most countries don't let the police pull you over just to see what they can find and detain you they need probable cause.
If you want to fly in Europe, you need a license for the respective drone class, special insurance and the drone must be registered! You are also only allowed to fly within visual range. So not kilometers away. Penalties can sometimes cost up to 20000 euros.
The police simply wait until you have to land and then check you. There is a more relaxed regulation for drones under 250g.
I used to build and fly RC aircraft.
With the new rules and regulations, they are acting as if you are able to carry nukes on a sub 1 pound drone!
My aircraft weighed up to 5 pounds with fuel and radio equipment on board. No cameras or packages of any kind.
And we flew from small unregulated airports!
They have taken a sport for kids and adults, and turned it into a highly regulated business for no reason other than 'security theater'. There is no danger to people or property when flown with common sense, and when the Karens are kept at bay...
The hardest thing about flying a drone is trying to figure out if a flight is legal or not. So many laws about drones. National laws, state laws, county laws, township laws, neighborhood hoa regulations!! It's ridiculous sometimes.
It's actually called detained for questioning arrested actually implies you are actually booked into a jail or cited for a crime
To be fair even if you asked a cop in the US they won't explain the difference they just want you in cuffs when they say so lol
Should note you need a part 107 (I believe it is) license before yt police turns you in ...if you don't have one already 😉 I thinks it's if you profit in any shape from drones or their footage. You need a commercial license and remote ID
The dumbest set of rules for anything. There are more laws governing drones, than guns in most countries.
Another example of government overreach.
Love those young people who are so interested in your operation. No jaded youth there!
Great to watch and much better than some of the official DJI videos. Thanks. Laurie. NZ
What a very honest, informative and entertaining video. I have just bought a DJI Mini 2 which I have yet to fly.
Hello "JerryRigEverything"! Thank you for showing us such a wonderful video! I feel so happy! I'm looking forward to your next work! Have a nice day!