Stuff (UK)

DJI Air 2S

Fresh from last month’s fly-by-wire thrills with the DJI FPV, swaps to something a little more sedate that’s engineered to capture ultra-stable content

- £899 / stuff.tv/air2s

Yep, we’re droning on yet again…

DAY 01

DJI’S status as overlord of the consumer drone world is pretty much unchalleng­ed, but there’s no sign of laurel-resting from the Chinese company.

This is the Air 2S, a souped-up version of the Mavic Air 2 that’s the same shape and size, but drops the ‘Mavic’ while upgrading the camera, obstacle-avoidance systems and transmissi­on range. At £130 more than the Mavic

Air 2, we’ve got two weeks of capturing videos and snapping photos to decide whether this is a worthwhile upgrade.

At first glance the Air 2S is virtually indistingu­ishable from the Mavic Air 2: a rectangula­r block with four fold-out rotor arms and a gimbal-mounted camera on the underside of the nose. But the camera is slightly larger, and a pair of up-facing anti-collision sensors have been added. When folded it’s roughly the size of a beer can and tucks away in a backpack. It’s light too, but not enough to avoid CAA registrati­on and an annual £9 Operator ID licence.

It’s also reassuring­ly sturdy in spite of its folding design and prepondera­nce of spindly bits. The rotor blades fold in so you don’t have to take them off, while the camera and its delicate gimbal can be protected with a pop-off plastic cover. The battery locks in place securely, while flush flaps cover the microsd card slot and USB-C file-transfer port.

The controller will be familiar to DJI owners. It’s not new, but neither does it need to be, with physical controls for gimbal tilt, taking photos or video, and automatic return to your take-off point without needing to touch your phone. The thumb-sticks can be removed for transport, with DJI thoughtful­ly including a place within the controller to stash them. There’s also a spring-loaded grip to hold your phone and connect via USB-C, microusb or Lightning.

DJI has sent us the ‘Fly More’ package: for £1169 you get two extra batteries, spare rotors and a carry case. That seems like a decent deal.

The camera is fantastic for a drone this size, turning out super-sharp photos and videos with stunning colour depth

DAY 02

Controller and phone hooked up, I tap the touchscree­n take-off button. The Air 2S is beautifull­y easy to fly, zipping around in the default flight mode. It’s limited to 120m altitude to comply with UK law, and those sensors stop it if it detects an obstacle anywhere other than sideways on. Slipping into Cinema mode, flight is slower and smoother, while Sport mode turns off the speed limiters and safety sensors.

DAY 04

It’s breezy today but the Air 2S can handle it despite a warning from the app – flying responsive­ly and stably, picking up some great sample footage. Range and flight time are impressive… but also illegal given you have to be able to see your drone with the naked eye. It beams a solid 1080p feed to the controller, and on the odd occasion of a lost transmissi­on the ‘return to home’ function kicks in.

The DJI Fly app has been refined so much that it’s actually enjoyable to use. You can easily access cool flight features like subject-tracking and Mastershot­s – an automated sequence of dramatic video clips centred around your chosen tracking subject.

DAY 06

The 20MP camera is fantastic for a drone this size, turning out super-sharp photos in various file formats and videos up to 5.7K with stunning colour depth and low-light performanc­e, all brilliantl­y stabilised by its three-axis gimbal.

One look at sample photos and videos shows how effective the

1in sensor is. Results right from the camera are impressive, but a bit of tweaking in Adobe Lightroom and Davinci Resolve never hurts.

DAY 08

The richness of colour in conditions where a smaller sensor would struggle is the real killer feature. That this camera is bolted onto such a stable and easy-to-fly drone just makes it all the better. OK, it lacks the adjustable aperture of the Mavic 2 Pro, and at certain resolution­s the lack of a crop means the rotor blades can occasional­ly pop into the frame. Both are minor issues, though.

DAY 14

The Air 2S may be DJI’S best drone yet: an almost perfect balance of portabilit­y, performanc­e and price. It’s ideal for novices but still able to produce nigh-on pro-level results.

 ??  ?? The included charger takes around 80mins to fill up a depleted battery, so maybe pack a spare.
The included charger takes around 80mins to fill up a depleted battery, so maybe pack a spare.
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