Just in time for Easter, some pilots are apparently already allowed to try out a new drone from DJI. Of course, this is not possible without photos. The first photo showing the new DJI Mavic 3 Pro in the wild demonstrates just how big the new Hasselblad camera has become. Matching ND filters cover all three cameras at once.
Not much is known regarding the new DJI drone, especially when it comes to the technical data, it can only be speculated at the moment. There is talk of a new 3x zoom camera that might potentially optically cover the 70 to 75mm range, in addition to wide-angle and ultra-wide-angle. What is increasingly standard with camera flagships on smartphones is slowly arriving in the world of drones.
The triple cam, of course once more gimbal-stabilized and with Hasselblad lettering, can now be seen up close for the first time for the first time, following render images and a picture of the packaging had already revealed the basic design. Nothing is small here, as you can see not only in the hands-on photo below but also in the ND filter set that covers all three cameras with one of four filter levels. The weight that the first Pro version of the Mavic 3 brings with it will probably be particularly exciting.
In the meantime, not only a fly-more combo with the DJI RC controller has been confirmed, but also a package with the more powerful DJI RC Pro remote control. It is not yet known when the new drone will be launched and how expensive it will be, so it probably won’t be long. DJI is also rumored to be releasing a Cine Plus version, increasing the number of Mavic 3 family members (DJI Mavic 3 Classic available here on Amazon from around 1600 euros) would then already rise to 8.
As a tech-enthusiastic youth with an assembling and overclocking past, I worked as a projectionist with the good old 35 mm film before I entered the computer world professionally and worked as a Windows client for 7 years at the Austrian IT service provider Iphos IT Solutions – and server administrator as well as project manager. As a freelancer who travels a lot, I have been writing for Notebookcheck from all corners of the world since 2016 regarding the latest mobile technologies in smartphones, laptops and gadgets of all kinds.