DJI Phantom 4 Pro RTK SE
The DJI Phantom 4 Pro RTK is easy to fly with obstacle avoidance, but the coolest new feature in the Phantom 4 Pro is TapFly. You have a live feed from the drone’s main camera on the screen of your mobile device. Tap anywhere on that image and the drone will fly in that direction. The drone will automatically ease into turns, avoiding the jerky motion you can have in footage while flying manually.
A new RTK module is integrated directly into the Phantom 4 RTK, providing real-time, centimeter-level positioning data for improved absolute accuracy on image metadata. Sitting just beneath the RTK receiver is a redundant GNSS module, installed to maintain flight stability in signal-poor regions such as dense cities. Combining both modules, the Phantom 4 RTK is able to optimize flight safety while ensuring the most precise data is captured for complex surveying, mapping and inspection workflows.
Fit the Phantom 4 RTK to any workflow, with the ability to connect this positioning system to the D-RTK 2 Mobile Station, NTRIP (Network Transport of RTCM via Internet Protocol) using a 4G dongle or WiFi hotspot, or store the satellite observation data to be used for Post Processed Kinematics (PPK).
DJI has rethought its drone technology from the ground-up, revolutionizing its systems to achieve a new standard for drone accuracy – offering
Phantom 4 RTK customers centimeter-accurate data while requiring fewer ground control points.
Industrial Accuracy
-
1cm+1ppm
RTK Horizontal Positioning Accuracy -
1.5cm+1ppm
RTK Vertical Positioning Accuracy -
5cm*
(*When flying at 100m height, 2.7cm GSD, sunny.)
Absolute Horizontal Accuracy
of Photogrammetric Models
The other big autonomous feature is AutoTrack. You select a subject — a person, a bike, a car — and the drone will lock on and keep them in the centre of the frame. It does this using the same computer vision technology employed for obstacle avoidance, except this time it’s building a 3D model not just of the environment, but also of the target you want to track.
It’s fast. The Phantom 4 Pro has a new “sport mode. As a pilot, you can toggle on the remote controller – that’s a lot like the sport mode on most luxury cars. The Phantom can fly up to 20 metres per second. It can also fly up to about 6000 metres up, although DJI’s software limits the drone to flying just 121 metres.
Footage from the DJI Phantom 4 Pro click here