Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
When you’re importing a used or refurbished DJI Agras sprayer—or any agricultural drone—from China into Kenya, the pre‑shipment inspection video is often the last honest look you’ll get before the crate lands at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. At Reboot Hub, we’ve seen Kenyan crop‑spraying operators lose weeks of the planting season untangling serial‑number mismatches that could have been caught in a 90‑second clip. Our technicians—MOHRSS Level‑3 trained and comfortable with chip‑level diagnostics—run a multi‑point bench test on every unit listed as “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless,” and the serial‑number verification step is baked into that process. But if you’re buying from a marketplace seller, a consolidator, or an auction lot, the burden of checking falls squarely on you. This article walks through exactly what to look for in that inspection video, how to spot batteries that have leaked in transit, how to read the quiet signs that a second‑hand Agras may have been crashed, and what else belongs on your unboxing checklist so that your Kenya farm isn’t grounded before it starts spraying.
DJI doesn’t register its drones by the box—it registers them by the flight controller serial number. If the serial on the aircraft doesn’t match the one the seller invoiced, a few things can go sideways quickly:
So that pre‑shipment clip isn’t just a courtesy—it’s a documented verification that attaches the machine in the video to the paperwork that will travel with it.
A seller who operates transparently will follow a structured shot list. If you’ve requested a Reboot Hub unit, this is already part of our bench‑test documentation, but for any other seller you should request the following continuous footage:
Start with the sealed or taped box → slowly rotate the box so all label text is legible → zoom in on the box serial‑number sticker → open the box and immediately show the matching serial label on the folding arm or central hull → power on the drone → open the DJI Agras app (or DJI Fly if it’s an agricultural airframe that supports it) → navigate to Device Info / About and show the digital serial number on‑screen → open the battery compartment and film the battery serial labels clearly → hold the battery upside‑down for 10 seconds (leak inspection; see below).
Ask the seller to place a visible clock, a current newspaper, or the tracking‑page order number in the frame. This isn’t paranoia—it’s a strong indicator that the video was shot for you, today, and not pulled from a library of old stock.
Serial labels can be small, dirty, or laser‑etched in low contrast. Below is a practical cross‑check reference that helps you know which characters must match and where to expect reasonable variations.
| Identifier location | What it should match | What might differ (and why) |
|---|---|---|
| Box label (typically a barcode sticker with DJI part number) | First 14 alphanumeric characters should mirror exactly the aircraft serial. | The box may show a SKU code (T40‑3W‑RTK etc.) that isn’t the serial—don’t confuse it. |
| Airframe sticker (arm, mounting plate, or belly) | Full serial, often preceded by “SN:” or etched directly. Must match the box and app. | A replaced arm may carry a different serial on the sticker, but the core flight‑controller serial remains unchanged. Focus on the main‑board readout. |
| DJI Agras / Fly app – Device Info → Aircraft SN | Full flight‑controller serial. This is the authoritative record. | App version and model name may display a truncated serial in the main dashboard. Always drill into Device Info for the complete string. |
| Battery compartment – each battery | Battery serials are independent. They should match the batteries documented on the seller’s checklist, not the drone serial. | A seller might supply a different‑battery batch than what was shown in the video. If they’re the same chemistry and cycle count, performance is equivalent—but document the change in writing. |
Pro tip for Agras boxes: DJI agricultural drones are large‑boxes; sometimes the outer shipping carton carries a freight‑forwarder barcode. The factory serial sticker is usually white, rectangular, and located near the DJI‑branded label or on the foam liner. Ask the seller to point at it in the video so you know exactly which sticker to verify later.
If you’d rather not negotiate the video checklist yourself, see how Reboot Hub builds serial‑number verification, leak testing, and crash inspection into every “Flawless” and “Pristine Pre‑Owned” unit before it leaves our Shenzhen/HK supply chain centre—visit The Reboot Hub Standard.
Batteries shipped from China to Kenya spend time in hot containers, cross‑dock transfers, and sometimes high‑altitude truck routes (if the cargo transits through Mombasa Road). “Smart” batteries can self‑discharge safely, but physical electrolyte leaks are the silent shipment killer. A leak may not kill the battery immediately; it can slowly corrode the drone’s power‑plug pins and cause an in‑flight short weeks later.
The operator should:
Even if the pre‑shipment video looked clean, the transport leg can introduce damage. When the crate arrives at your Kenya farm:
The Kenyan sun is punishing; a battery that vented in transit will only get worse when it’s sitting in a charging case on a 32°C day. Catching leaks before the first charge lowers the chance of a costly fire and protects the rest of your investment.
Kenya’s topography—terraced tea farms, steep maize fields, wind‑funnelled valleys—pushes drones hard. A well‑maintained crash is not a deal‑breaker; Reboot Hub’s MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians perform chip‑level repair and replace compromised components as a matter of course, so a refurbished unit can fly with the reliability of a new one. But if a seller markets a drone as “like‑new” and yet the airframe tells a different story, you need to recognise the signs before wiring the payment.
A drone that was crashed and poorly repaired will often reveal itself through drifting hover, uneven spray‑swath width, or sudden voltage drops. Those are exactly the headaches that eat into a spraying contract’s margins. If you’re buying a “Pristine Pre‑Owned” unit from Reboot Hub, the multi‑point bench test includes a motoring‑test and a flight‑controller health check that flags subtle drifts before shipping. For any other source, your pre‑shipment video is your best field away from the field.
A purchase checklist, designed for the Kenyan operator who may not have easy access to a DJI service centre in Nairobi for months, might look like this:
Before committing, review a drone comparison that lays out model differences—weight, tank capacity, acre‑per‑hour rates—so you know you’re buying the right airframe for your shamba size. See the DJI Drone Comparison 2026 to align your farm needs with the correct Agras generation.
Print or save this checklist on your phone so you can walk through it when the crate arrives. Regional rules change, and you should always check with the relevant national aviation authority (KCAA) for any updated import or registration requirements. The following is a practical, on‑the‑ground sequence:
Inspect crate exterior before opening
- Photograph all six sides. Any forklift puncture or “tilt‑watch” indicator that has tripped must be recorded for a freight claim.
Open crate, locate packing list
- Match every line item physically before signing the delivery note. If the courier is in a hurry, write “goods accepted subject to hidden transport damage” on the waybill.
Serial‑number verification
- Compare box sticker, drone hull, and app readout. Use the table above.
Battery electrolyte check
- White‑paper test for each battery. Check pins and membrane.
Propeller and motor spin test
- Spin each motor by hand; listen for grit. Flex each propeller gently and inspect under bright light.
Controller and screen pairing
- Link the remote controller and confirm that firmware is updated (the app will prompt). Do this inside a cool room—direct sun may cause the tablet to throttle.
Landing‑gear and radar inspection
- Look for uneven leg lengths. Clean the radar lens with a dry microfibre.
Spray‑system dry run
- Fill the tank with clean water, run the pump at idle, and check for leaks at the hose connectors. A slow drip under pressure indicates a seal that has dried during shipment.
RTK signal acquisition (outdoors)
- Power up the RTK dongle/base and verify that the drone enters “RTK fixed” within a few minutes in an open area. Poor satellite lock may point to a damaged antenna inside the hull.
Document everything
Each Reboot Hub “Flawless” unit ships with a standardised bench‑test report. To understand exactly which checks are performed before the crate is taped shut, see our Drone Grading Standard.
This usually points to a core‑component replacement, such as a flight controller or ESC board. While the drone may fly fine, the app serial is the true manufacturing identifier. A mismatch could affect warranty, and in rare cases may indicate a unit assembled from salvaged parts. We recommend asking the seller to explain the discrepancy in writing and providing a video that shows the app serial next to the physical drone. If the explanation doesn’t satisfy you, consider delaying acceptance of the shipment until you’ve checked with DJI support or a qualified repair centre.
A sticky or oily residue near the cell seam is a classic sign that the battery vented electrolyte during transit—likely due to pressure changes or a hard knock. Do not charge that battery indoors or near crops. Isolate it in a fire‑safe container and arrange a replacement with the seller. For shipments through Reboot Hub, such a battery would be covered under our 180‑day refurbished warranty provided the damage is reported with photographic documentation within the claim window.
Hard landings often leave subtle marks: hairline stress cracks radiating from the motor‑mount screws, scuffed radar lens edges, or a slight asymmetry in the landing gear when viewed directly from the front. Also ask the vendor to place the drone on a flat concrete floor and film it from ground level—if one leg hovers even 2 mm above the surface, the frame may be twisted. A good video will linger on every arm hinge for at least five seconds. If the seller rushes past those areas, ask for a reshoot.
Both routes have trade‑offs. A unit already in-country lets you inspect it in person before payment and avoids import delays, but it may come with limited warranty and unknown repair history. A refurbished unit from a specialist like Reboot Hub that includes MOHRSS Level‑3 technician vetting and a 180‑day warranty reduces the chance of receiving a crash‑damaged drone, but you’ll manage shipping and import clearance. Choose based on how comfortable you are reading inspection videos and handling customs paperwork.
Remote controllers have their own serial numbers and may be swapped because they frequently fail or are sold separately. If the controller in the video isn’t the one in the box, confirm with the seller that the new controller has been bound (paired) to the aircraft before shipping. If they can’t demonstrate a successful binding in a follow‑up video, you may arrive to a drone that won’t arm. A quick screen‑recording of the pairing process is a reasonable request.
When you source your next agricultural drone from Reboot Hub, you don’t have to negotiate an inspection checklist from scratch. Every unit—whether graded “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless”—has already passed a multi‑point bench test, a leak inspection, and a serial‑number cross‑check that matches the airframe, the app readout, and the box it ships in. Our Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply‑chain technicians work at the component level, so you receive a machine that’s genuinely ready for the Mombasa‑Nairobi run and the shamba waiting beyond.
Browse our current inventory of DJI Agras refurbished sprayers, compare capacity and spreading‑width specs for your acreage, and review the 180‑day warranty that comes standard.
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