Great vid! As you have demonstrated here, there is a difference between being *in* a storm, which would be lunacy and the rain alone would ruin your bird, and *filming* a storm. I've gotten some beautiful lightning strikes from a storm that was maybe 10 miles away. If the conditions and visibility are good enough to see exactly where the storm is and isn't, go for it. Just be aware which direction things are moving - and that the wind may well be going quite fast at higher altitudes!
I went out to test my new split-battery mod, but by the time I got out and flying a monsoon storm rolled in. I saw the dust devil on the FPV, and was turning back so didn't realize I captured the lightning until I viewed the video at home!
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Awesome photo!I captured this but was several miles away.View attachment 60720
Sent from my SM-N900P using PhantomPilots mobile app
That was freaking awesome!!!I went out to test my new split-battery mod, but by the time I got out and flying a monsoon storm rolled in. I saw the dust devil on the FPV, and was turning back so didn't realize I captured the lightning until I viewed the video at home!
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I filmed this several month ago.
Like others suggest, I'd stay at least a mile away. Often you get better lightning shots from a distance anyway. And you won't need a direct strike to knock out some electronics. Lightning bolts carry EMP's strong enough to knock out at least some of the electronics for several hundred meters from the actual bolt.
Mike
any idea on settings was it auto or preset
TY
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