- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 472
- Reaction score
- 102
I'd put that question to @EyeWingsuit , I think with his vantage point he could provide a close answer if not an educated answer...but then that would be another topic...start another thread or poll with that question and tag him in your post....
Me personally, I think 99% would like to turn the endeavor into a money machine...you name it as the sky is the limit.
In the Commercial world, 3DR is the absolute owner.
I have to disagree on this. All of the multirotors I work with commercially (Inspire, S900, and two Aeronavics SkyJibs) run DJI gear because they just work.
Admittedly you do have to be careful with updates (always stay one update behind the latest, never update just before a job etc), but when you get on site and the clients are looking over your shoulder and half the workforce are standing there with smartphones then you want it to start first time.
I would never take my Solo to a client-facing job like that because I don't want to stand around like an idiot for 10 minutes hoping like hell I'm going to get GPS lock. Yeah sure I can do half a dozen mods to fix all of the the little niggles but for commercial work I don't want to spend weeks getting a new aircraft up-to-spec, and I'd hate to think what CASA or my insurance company would think if one of the mods was responsible for an incident.
I am working on ways to use the Solo commercially, but it will never be for video work (the gimbal is still nowhere near as good as a Zenmuse H4-3D) and never for anything time sensitive.
But the capabilities of the Solo and Pixhawk 2 do offer up commercial opportunities if you're willing to think outside the box.
I understand the OPs frustrations, but I think you need to make a choice whether you want cutting edge or reliable, you won't get both in the same product.
Ah yes, I remember the slogan, so easy a monkey can fly it, hardly. 3dr is the one who aimed the solo at the hobbyists as a RTF, worlds first smart drone. It fell very short of RTF and is hardly the first smart drone. There are other manufacturers who left Wi Fi connectivity in the 90's where it belongs and who's GPS is far superior to the Solo's. And now you have to pretty much use an Apple device if you want to benefit from future firmware improvements, smart move on 3dr's part to piss off the many Android users out there. They should have aimed their advertising at people that have the time to tinker and upgrade and that have endless cash. My guess is there are a lot of just hobbyists out there and there are far better choices for them than the Solo. This is not saying that the Solo is a bad bird but it should never have been aimed at hobbyists. It requires a lot of patience, time and money to get it where 3dr advertised it to be out of the box. On top of that 3dr seems to be wanting to put the solo in their rear view mirror and move onto a different market. I wonder where the future proof solo will be in the not too distant future when the hardware will be outdated and parts from 3dr are non existent. It doesn't look like sales of the solo were high enough to warrant 3rd party manufacturers to supply the high dollar parts that will, sooner or later, fail. This is all just an observation from watching 3dr's actions lately. I may be completely off base but this is what 3dr is portraying right now. I hope I am wrong for everyone's sake. So Twitchy, I understand your frustrations and I acted on mine some time ago. I periodically check in here to see if things are improving but it seems they are not. Seems to me that there are not a lot of new members here, just the same die hard Solo guys that will eventually go down with the ship, if or when it goes down. BTW I am 55 years old or young, however you want to look at it.There's no need for labeling/stereotyping millennials here...I tried dealing with many of the shortcomings by dumping considerable amount on mods for an entire year.
mediocre range = higher gain antenna, legs in shot, sliders, vibrations in gimbal...no hardware mod is an end-all be-all so I'll rely on post stabilization, balancing weights and filters. I'm sure I'm missing a few more. Trust me, if I wanted instant gratification I wouldn't even have bothered backing Solo, a relatively unknown product at the time of ordering.
I gain nothing from bashing 3DR...I feel my initial post is reflective and honest of my experiences. I would hardly call the headaches perceived....some are subjective sure others are purely objective. If you can put a positive spin to them exiting consumer space, taking away upcoming selling points because they lost lead developers and non-transparent communication and silence on major issues then I'd argue that's blind loyalty.
I have no problem adming 3DR Solo is my first quad. It was promised to be easy, set-up your frames and off you go. I familiarize myself with fly:manual only for emergency purposes during GPS loss.. If you're wealthy or have insurance to cover loss, I'm happy for you but I won't risk flying without GPS. I'm just a hobbyist for photography and now multirotors. If it's a user-error I'll take the responsibilities. I just don't feel Solo is a confident/stable platform.
Members here can criticize the early object avoidance and other nanny features...I'd say better safe than sorry, it's hardly a bad idea having options. Not everyone flying has hundreds and hundreds of flying hours under their belt nor is it a requirement to enjoy this hobby.
The number of site scan, Solos for ag, Telecom RFQ's that come in weekly are heavily 3DR solo designated.
In maybe two weeks, you'll learn about a big one, whose director specifically sought out solo for some shots that could only be accomplished in an unmanned, non-jib environment, as it's a multimillion $$ one-take.
Ah yes, I remember the slogan, so easy a monkey can fly it, hardly. 3dr is the one who aimed the solo at the hobbyists as a RTF, worlds first smart drone. It fell very short of RTF and is hardly the first smart drone. There are other manufacturers who left Wi Fi connectivity in the 90's where it belongs and who's GPS is far superior to the Solo's. And now you have to pretty much use an Apple device if you want to benefit from future firmware improvements, smart move on 3dr's part to piss off the many Android users out there. They should have aimed their advertising at people that have the time to tinker and upgrade and that have endless cash. My guess is there are a lot of just hobbyists out there and there are far better choices for them than the Solo. This is not saying that the Solo is a bad bird but it should never have been aimed at hobbyists. It requires a lot of patience, time and money to get it where 3dr advertised it to be out of the box. On top of that 3dr seems to be wanting to put the solo in their rear view mirror and move onto a different market. I wonder where the future proof solo will be in the not too distant future when the hardware will be outdated and parts from 3dr are non existent. It doesn't look like sales of the solo were high enough to warrant 3rd party manufacturers to supply the high dollar parts that will, sooner or later, fail. This is all just an observation from watching 3dr's actions lately. I may be completely off base but this is what 3dr is portraying right now. I hope I am wrong for everyone's sake. So Twitchy, I understand your frustrations and I acted on mine some time ago. I periodically check in here to see if things are improving but it seems they are not. Seems to me that there are not a lot of new members here, just the same die hard Solo guys that will eventually go down with the ship, if or when it goes down. BTW I am 55 years old or young, however you want to look at it.
Like releasing Sitescan when it didn't even have GCP support.3DR's biggest problem is they suffer from marketing. Their VP marketing seems to know next to nothing about the industry, and seems to care even less.
Well that is good news, and it probably shows that clients are becoming a lot more sensible in what they're asking for. Plenty of the tenders I've seen ask for ridiculous things - ie an intrinsically safe UAV for an LNG refinery, RTK precision on a landfill stockpile, 1cm resolution on a 500km long pipeline etc etc
A fleet of Solos would be fine for an infrastructure company to use internally because timeliness is less of a factor in that situation. But if a client pays me thousands of dollars and flies me to a minesite in West Africa then I need to know it's going to work when I get there.
That sends shivers down my spine, but with enough Solos at their disposal there should be enough redundancy to pull it off. I look forward to seeing the results.
Thanks but no I don't have any travel plans at the moment, that was just an example. But there was one trip to Africa where two 'proper' survey fixed-wings failed on me and I was left with just an Inspire 1 to do training and map an exploration project, an open pit mine, some stockpiles and a quarry. In fact the guys I was training are still using that Inspire - it's lasted months in some pretty harsh conditions, from tropical jungle to the edge of the Sahara. Anyway to bring this back on topic, when I was deciding what drone to take over there to train them up on I would never have considered a Solo because it needs so much TLC.Good luck on the trip, don't forget to take all batteries in carry on..![]()
Like releasing Sitescan when it didn't even have GCP support.
I've learnt to be skeptical of marketing in this industry, but that was when I realised 3DR wasn't immune to it.
I was making the point that it was released before they'd put GCP support in.so i think its safe to say that SiteScan supports GCPs.
3DR's biggest problem is they suffer from marketing. Their VP marketing seems to know next to nothing about the industry, and seems to care even less. That's easily the most frustrating aspect of the company. You're not terribly off about much of what you say. It actually is (now) a straight out of the box, great flying RTF. Losing android...not a well-thought out move given the sector in the industry they're wanting to capture. It's been a challenge in the last three weeks having that conversation with people who spec'd 3DR as part of a larger solution.
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