Hello,
Why is there such a big difference in max wind resistance between the V1/V2 and the V3? The V1/V2 stated roughly 43mph resistance and the V3 now stays 27mph. Photo is a screen grab from Autel's website.
I think you will find that many specs regarding the
EVO II 6K have been inflated (
EVO II 6K can't shoot 6K video,
EVO II can't fly for 40min, etc.). 43mph wind resistance sounds quite unrealistic and 27mph sounds more realistic. Sure the drone can fly 45mph so theoretically could "handle" 43mph winds, but in the real world you would probably lose your
EVO II if you actually tried to fly it in constant 43mph winds.
I am not sure how they measured wind resistance (headwinds only, cross winds as well, or tailwinds), but I can tell you that if you tried to fly an
EVO II back to its homepoint with 43mph crosswinds you would lose the drone. 27mph sounds more realistic when it comes to "handling" winds from any direction. I am defining "handling" here as the ability to control the drone well enough to return to its takeoff point and safely land. There is nothing you can safely do with an
EVO II in 43mph winds except keep it in the case.
I have flown the
EVO II 6K V1 in windy conditions with constant winds around 20mph and gusts up to 40mph and I wouldn't trust keeping control over it for more than 100' away from me. No way would it have been reliable with constant 40mph winds.