Beeping when turning on controller means there is obstructions on the sticks. The potentiometer reads from negative 1000 to positive 1000 for up/down and left and right. For the controller not to beep, it must precisely register 0,0 when the controller is turned on. Try holding a stick down and turning on the controller. Notice the beeps?Are you up to date on your firmware? I still have an old firmware and sometimes when I turn my controller on it beeps constantly. I figured out that I can turn it off by moving the joysticks around before I turn the on the bird the beeping will shut off. It never beeps during the flight though.
I am not sure what you are trying to say but the way it sounds makes me think you are being very paranoid.This is bull s. You do not need an update. Check for gov people around. They are bad. I have just hijacked. Writing to Wu (DJI rep)
I am not sure what you are trying to say but the way it sounds makes me think you are being very paranoid.
This is bull s. You do not need an update. Check for gov people around. They are bad. I have just hijacked. Writing to Wu (DJI rep)
I know Controller beeps if signal is lost for "?" seconds. There may be more conditions under which it might beep.
check your flight log
Beeping when turning on controller means there is obstructions on the sticks. The potentiometer reads from negative 1000 to positive 1000 for up/down and left and right. For the controller not to beep, it must precisely register 0,0 when the controller is turned on. Try holding a stick down and turning on the controller. Notice the beeps?
To rectify the beeping, try recalibrating the controller.
The only other reason for beeping is when you leave the controller untouched for a prolong period of time..
Try to calibrate RC
This is bull s. You do not need an update. Check for gov people around. They are bad. I have just hijacked. Writing to Wu (DJI rep)
I did try this but I'm having a hard time getting my Mac to recognize the bird after going into flight data mode. Still troubleshooting that
I did try this but I'm having a hard time getting my Mac to recognize the bird after going into flight data mode. Still troubleshooting that
While in Flight Data Mode with everything connected, open the Disk Utility application on the Mac.
There the internal Phantom SD card is displayed as an unmounted disk. If you can mount it, you can extract the .DAT files straight away.
If it's not possible to mount the disc(it often isn't) using Disk Utility, select the SD card and created a Disk Image of the entire Phantom SD card saving it to my computer hard drive. To do this, select the SD Card, then File>New Image>Blank Image and save the file to desktop.
After it has completed open the Disk Image as any other folder and save the enclosed .DAT files to a new folder for viewing.
However, depending on how many .DAT files (flights) there are, it can take a long time to create the rather sizable disk image of the entire SD card.
(The Phantom battery can often get run down in the process. Start with the battery at least 50% charged).
Hmmm, what version OS are you on, El Capitain? Maybe try this.So I tried this and I'm unable to mount, but I'm able to save the root disc file. But it's only 100mb and I don't find anything on it. Almost like it hasn't saved anything.
Any ideas?
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