Omnidirectional obstacle sensing and double the transmission distance — in a drone that’s otherwise much the same.
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Now that Skydio has exited the consumer drone business and will never sell me the miniature self-flying drone of my dreams, I’m looking to DJI instead. The fancy marketing for its just-announced $759 DJI Mini 4 Pro suggests we’re at least on the way — because it’s the first Mini with omnidirectional obstacle sensing.
I can’t vouch for its tree-dodging yet, but Vjeran now has one to test:
In many ways, the Mini 4 Pro largely brings the Mini 3 Pro up to parity with the larger, pricier $1,099 DJI Air 3. It already had a similar main camera (1/1.3-inch, 48-megapixel, f/1.7 with 82-degree FOV) and similar battery life of over 40 minutes, but now adds the omnidirectional obstacle avoidance, 100fps 4K shooting (and 200fps 1080p shooting), and Ocusync 4 video transmission for 20 kilometers of range (up from 12 km) that the Air already had.
The Mini 3 is also DJI’s affordable battery champ with four to six more minutes on a battery charge, depending on which battery you insert.
I’d recommend loading up the Mini 4 Pro, Mini 3 Pro and the DJI Air 3 in DJI’s side-by-side comparison website — it’s nice to see the differences directly.
If you do have a Mini 3 Pro or are stocking up on accessories, you’ll be happy to hear the Mini 4 Pro uses the same batteries — but it needs a new controller because of the upgraded Ocusync 4 video transmission.