![]() Max one-way communication distance of DJI Mini 3 Pro in countries/regions of different standards:įCC: United States, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Chile, Colombia, Puerto Rico, and other regions. Only to serve as a reference and provides no guarantee as to the actual flight distance. Data is tested under FCC standards in unobstructed environments of typical interference. Download speeds may vary depending on actual conditions.Ħ. With footage saved on an SD card or the internal storage. Measured in a laboratory environment with little interference in countries/regions that support both 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz. Always check local rules and regulations before use, as they may change over time.ĥ. Please use the 2.4 GHz frequency band when operating in these locations. Due to local policy and regulation restrictions, the 5.8 GHz frequency band is currently banned in certain countries, including but not limited to Japan, Russia, Israel, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan. When the aircraft is using the Intelligent Flight Battery Plus, do not mount additional payloads like a propeller guard or third-party accessories to avoid a lack of propulsion.Ĥ. Increase in aircraft weight can affect flight propulsion. Please abide by local laws and regulations when flying.ģ. The max flight speed is subject to local restrictions that may change. Please check and strictly abide by local laws and regulations before flying.Ģ. With the DJI Mini 3 Pro Intelligent Flight Battery Plus, the aircraft will weigh more than 249 g (about 290 g). ![]() Firmware updates can enhance performance, so updating to the latest firmware is highly recommended. These specifications have been determined through tests conducted with the latest firmware. Check local rules and regulations before use. ![]() Registration is not required in some countries and regions. Actual product weight may vary due to differences in batch materials and external factors. The standard weight of the aircraft (including the DJI Mini 3 Pro Intelligent Flight Battery, propellers, and a microSD card). If you hold the “Ctrl” key when clicking checkboxes in the contents list, it applies to ALL the checkboxes!Ģ:48: Proving to you, my friends, that the resulting mosaic is indeed a single image (by changing the raster symbology and also making a seamless hillshade).1. Sigh.Ģ:13: A look at the pyramid layers ArcGIS Pro automatically makes when you add images to a project, and the output mosaic’s files.Ģ:42: More tradecraft. Finding and adding separate DEM images.Ġ:30: Mosaic to New Raster tool (with little tradecraft tidbit about dragging a bunch of layers into the tool’s input).ġ:00: Optionally defining an output spatial reference.ġ:22: Pixel type? Bits? Signed vs unsigned? Check it.ġ:41: How to check the pixel depth of an input image layer (also, they all have to be the same if you want to mosaic them).Ģ:01: Inadvertent “new email” chime in the background because I forgot to close Outlook before recording. Big time-saver and your maps will look better.Ġ:00: Rudely short introduction. This is how you can create a “mosaic” in ArcGIS Pro from a bunch of separate images so you can work with them like they’re just one thing. ![]() But if you didn’t it will make your rastery life so much easier. ![]()
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