The Phantom 2 comes in its own box with a smaller box that the Zenmuse comes in. They ship in a larger brown box - made me wonder why they didn't just put the gimbal into the white box. I have opened lots of RC stuff over the years and I am always just a little bit impressed with the packaging when I open DJI stuff. It makes you think, "if they put this much thought into the packaging..." I laid everything out just to give a shot at all the different stuff. The battery and battery charger are much different than anything else I have seen in any other RC equipment. I was puzzling over the strange battery connector on the new battery and wondering if they just switched everything to this new connector to keep the margins up (New batteries are EXPENSIVE for this bird). After plugging in the battery and marveling at actually having an on / off button that is part of the battery, I noticed the crude 4 bar battery guage built into the back. This allows you to get a reading of capacity remaining during flight and see charge status while charging. These batteries are pretty cool and I am curious to see if we are going to start seeing copy cats of this because it works well and locks out other manufacturers from selling Phantom batteries. Maybe someone over at DJI just finished the Steve Jobs biography and learned how powerful closed systems can be to a business. The Zenmuse cable and prewired FPV connector sticking out of the bottom. I immediately noticed the flat underbelly which makes it so much easier to attach your video transmitter. This little drone is obviously designed for FPV - Awesome. Make sure you read my post about how to FPV your Phantom 2 if you want to see how I did it or need some help. On the original phantom with gimbal installed and the s800, backing up your gimbal by using zip ties was ugly and crude but very necessary to prevent the loss of the gimbal if one of those rubber vibration dampers failed. For the phantom 2, they designed some very slick "zip tie bolts." This was already the 2nd amazing fix from the original phantom, things are looking good! I did not at first like the centered throttle stick and immediately opened it up to look for the springs to remove. Here they are and at this point I just decided to try it how it was designed in case they had a reason for this change because putting those little springs back on did not look fun. Spoiler alert**** Turns out this centered throttle stick is an amazing feature for an aerial photography rig and doesn't just floor the motors when the stick returns to the center after arming your motors. The Zenmuse is shifted forward to counterbalance the weight of the bigger battery - excellent. Balance is an important thing on quadcopters and they have you covered here. Here my co-pilot tries to decide if he likes the centered throttle stick. Next I wired up my FPV transmitter to make this an official FPV camera drone. You can read this post I wrote about How to Fpv your phantom 2 if you want to see how I did this. Time to test out those claims of 20-25 minutes. I flew very aggressively, fast forward flight, figure 8's, rapid ascents and descents, and general flight abuse tests in some very windy conditions. I was very impressed with the sound of the motors and the new propellers (that counter rotate from the direction of the spin to lock into place). There was a very smooth sounding spool up when arming the motors - certainly not the rapid acceleration to mid point that I was expecting. They have obviously thought this process out and written code in the flight controller to do this, another excellent sign of ingenuity and design. It didn't really take any time to get used to the centered throttle stick, it felt really intuitive and didn't feel like it flew any different. I loved that I always knew where mid stick was, a feature I always thought would be great (however, I envisioned a beep every time it crossed midpoint instead of the spring, but this works really well too). Another HUGE benefit to anyone shooting aerial photography in general, the focus on mid stick means that it is now very easy to keep the same altitude. When I am in the goggles doing an FPV flight, I always tend to just creep higher than I want too because I can't get a sense for where the middle is. This centered point is also really good for people who will be flying line of site because you now don't have to manage the altitude at all, you just send it up or down and then it centers and just hovers. What an awesome way to shoot aerial photography, its like a flying crane! This is the timer when it finally forcibly made me land. It made it through the first voltage warning and flew for another 4 minutes or so. I sometimes like to fly over the ocean so I want to make sure im heading back in about 13 minutes. Leaves plently of time to find my way home, even if I get lost like I did during my fpv adventure at Jaws. If I was flying gently in a safe area, I would feel safe keeping this in the air for 15 minutes before a must land. This very well might approach 20 mintutes of flight time without the gimbal and FPV transmitter. A simple GPS hover probably will do 25 minutes with no wind under perfect conditions. This battery boost essentially doubles the flight times I have become accustomed to on my old phantom, QAV400, QAV500 and even the S800. All around a very impressive update. This makes the original phantom feel like a beta version because there are so many thoughtful additions and features that could only come about through tons of testing and thought. If you enjoyed this post, you should check out the DJI Phantom 2 with Zenmuse for sale at Amazon. As always, if you have questions or comments, please comment below!
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