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Hello from Leeds
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<blockquote data-quote="Serhat" data-source="post: 97210" data-attributes="member: 18542"><p>Hello all,</p><p></p><p>This is Serhat from Leeds, UK. I live in city center and I don't drive so it was a bit tricky to get to country side and fly my drone. I didn't know there were many restrictions. Also the weather isn't the best here (wind and rain). That's why yy Spark was sleeping in a dark corner of my flat. Now I found this forum and I feel like it is time to brush of the dust and fly the little drone. </p><p></p><p>It is my first drone and I am amazed by the image stability, video quality and functions. However I have to admit being a drone pilot is harder than it seems. You need lots of practice. And your practice time is limited by fly time which is limeted by battery time which is, well, 12-15 mins per battery. I ve got a spare battery but it seems there is not enough amount of spare battery <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite1" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":)" /></p><p></p><p>When you write down the reasons not to have a drone it will be a long list. Then you go out, shoot a video in angles that are unthinkable of with your phone camera which puts a big stupid grin on your face. Then you understand the potencial, the possibilities of different angles, different footage you can shoot. The rest is practice and a little bir of dedication I guess.</p><p></p><p>What I'd like to learn more about Spark and in general about drone flying are</p><p>- How to maximise battery life </p><p>- Video capturing do and don'ts. </p><p>- Basic shooting techniques and best practices that I can put in to practice in generic situations. For example shooting on a beach, shooting at contryside, shooting on a mountain. I learn a lot about the drone when you try to mimic the camera angles of successful recordings.</p><p></p><p>Thanks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Serhat, post: 97210, member: 18542"] Hello all, This is Serhat from Leeds, UK. I live in city center and I don't drive so it was a bit tricky to get to country side and fly my drone. I didn't know there were many restrictions. Also the weather isn't the best here (wind and rain). That's why yy Spark was sleeping in a dark corner of my flat. Now I found this forum and I feel like it is time to brush of the dust and fly the little drone. It is my first drone and I am amazed by the image stability, video quality and functions. However I have to admit being a drone pilot is harder than it seems. You need lots of practice. And your practice time is limited by fly time which is limeted by battery time which is, well, 12-15 mins per battery. I ve got a spare battery but it seems there is not enough amount of spare battery :) When you write down the reasons not to have a drone it will be a long list. Then you go out, shoot a video in angles that are unthinkable of with your phone camera which puts a big stupid grin on your face. Then you understand the potencial, the possibilities of different angles, different footage you can shoot. The rest is practice and a little bir of dedication I guess. What I'd like to learn more about Spark and in general about drone flying are - How to maximise battery life - Video capturing do and don'ts. - Basic shooting techniques and best practices that I can put in to practice in generic situations. For example shooting on a beach, shooting at contryside, shooting on a mountain. I learn a lot about the drone when you try to mimic the camera angles of successful recordings. Thanks. [/QUOTE]
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Hello from Leeds