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DJI Inspire 1 takes flight with a 4K camera

A high-end RTF quadcopter built for capturing great photos and video, the Inspire 1 sounds like one dreamy drone.

Joshua Goldman Managing Editor / Advice
Managing Editor Josh Goldman is a laptop expert and has been writing about and reviewing them since built-in Wi-Fi was an optional feature. He also covers almost anything connected to a PC, including keyboards, mice, USB-C docks and PC gaming accessories. In addition, he writes about cameras, including action cams and drones. And while he doesn't consider himself a gamer, he spends entirely too much time playing them.
Expertise Laptops, desktops and computer and PC gaming accessories including keyboards, mice and controllers, cameras, action cameras and drones Credentials
  • More than two decades experience writing about PCs and accessories, and 15 years writing about cameras of all kinds.
Joshua Goldman
4 min read

There are quadcopters with cameras out there that could be considered nothing more than toys. The DJI Inspire 1 is no toy.

Billed by DJI as the world's first 4K flying camera, the Inspire 1 is a step-up model from the Phantom 2 Vision+ released earlier this year. And it's a pretty big step-up, too, with a matching price tag: $2,900. Pricing for the UK is £2,380 and in Australia you'll be paying AU$4,130.

With carbon-fiber landing gear that lowers and lifts automatically on take-off and landing, the camera's 94-degree field of view is left unobstructed as it captures video at resolutions up to 4K at 30fps (it does 1080p at 60fps as well) and 12-megapixel stills. The camera rotates a full 360 degrees and tilts 125 degrees.

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Joshua Goldman/CNET

Similar to the Vision+, the camera is attached to a three-axis gimbal for smooth video even with sudden movements or high winds. The whole thing looks sturdier, though, and more importantly it's easily removable. So if you want to fly without the camera, replace it if it gets damaged or perhaps upgrade it in the future, it's a no-tool affair.

There's no more taking your hands off the controller to fiddle with camera settings on your smartphone, either. The remote controller for the Inspire 1 has camera controls built into the top left and right corners. Or, you can give a second controller to someone else for dedicated control over the camera.

The controller also has DJI's Lightbridge wireless transmitter technology that live-streams 1080p video to an iOS or Android device so you can set up shots at distances up to about a mile away (1.7 kilometers). WIth USB and HDMI outputs on back, you can directly connect a smartphone, tablet and/or display.

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Joshua Goldman/CNET

As for piloting the Inspire 1, it should be easier to fly than the Vision+, which is saying something, because that one is pretty easy to fly. Since this is a ready-to-fly (RTF) model, there's no tinkering here. You just spin on the color-coded self-tightening props, charge it up and that's pretty much it.

The Inspire 1 can take off and land at the push of a button, and if you choose to land it on your own, its wider base and shock absorbers mean there's less chance of tipping even if you come down a little hard or off-kilter.

To help with drift when shooting indoors or whenever you can't get a GPS lock, DJI added a camera and sensors on the bottom of the copter that create a stereoscopic image of the ground to keep the Inspire 1 steady without constant adjustments.

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Joshua Goldman/CNET

For safety, DJI made its return-to-home feature dynamic, so your home is now wherever you are. This allows you to calibrate and take off from one location and if you move, it will come back to you and not where you launched from. (A feature you definitely want if you plan to take off from a moving boat, for example.)

Like DJI's other copters, the Inspire 1 can be set to return home when battery power runs low. The new iOS and Android apps created for the Inspire 1 will also let you see exactly how much power is left in each one of its six cells. (You can use this to see the health of the cells as well in case one isn't performing properly.)

The app gives you full telemetry from the Inspire's sensors and control over all the camera's settings along with the capability to adjust the remote controller's settings. And for those who want to have it fly autonomously, you'll be able to plot its course on a map simply by drawing it out on your mobile device's touchscreen.

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Joshua Goldman/CNET

The biggest potential downside for buyers (other than price) will be its flight times. On a full charge under ideal conditions, the Inspire 1 can only fly for up to 18 minutes. That's while recording 4K video at 30fps, so that's good. It will more likely be wind and the speed at which your flying that will shorten it.

If you're new to the hobby, that might sound brief. However, given all the capabilities of the Inspire 1, that flight time isn't unreasonable and certainly on par with or better than you'll get from other quadcopters that are not as well equipped as the Inspire 1. Extra batteries are of course an option, but with the Vision+ battery going for about $130, the Inspire 1's likely won't be any less expensive.

You can read more details on the Inspire 1 on DJI's site and preorder them as well. The plan is to have them start shipping by mid-December.