Scott Lee was flying his Mavic Pro recreationally in western Pennsylvania when he heard a shot from a rifle not too far away.
At the time, he was hovering, adjusting his camera angle at 389 feet. After the shot, all systems appeared to be normal. He continued to fly the drone. However, when he decided to bring it back, he noticed a big difference in his drone…
Lee told us:
I was flying around and at one point stopped and let it hover at exactly 389 feet to adjust the settings on the camera. Hovering for roughly 1 minute… That’s when I heard a shot but didn’t think anything about it… Flew it back and landed it and then as it was landing I noticed the damage… It didn’t have any trouble bringing it back that I noticed… Looks like a rifle and was one lucky shot.
DJI Mavic Pro rifle damage
From the images, it appears that the Mavic Pro battery bore the brunt of the damage. You can see the layers exposed there. It is very surprising that it did not catch fire, let alone allowed the drone to return to the pilot. Lee guesses it was a 223 caliber rifle but is uncertain. He wasn’t recording footage at the time of the incident.
OK, the person who did this is a bastard but to hit a small drone at almost 400 feet up? That’s a pretty good single shot.
There also appears to be damage to the rear stem of one of the motors and obviously the battery and shell casing took a ton of damage.
It looks like the bullet entered the bottom rear leg, grazed the side surface, then exited through the battery.
We’re going to see if we can’t get Lee a new battery and perhaps there are a few flights left on this Mavic Pro?
Lee did contact the State Police but hasn’t yet filed any charges.
Written by Seth Weintraub | 15 June 2020
Get some quotes for a drone operator
âś” 100% free serviceâś” Featured in the SMH, The Age & WA Today
âś” 1,800+ online recommendations
