Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
If you’re inspecting solar panels commercially in Romania, a thermal-equipped drone with a valid CE mark is the practical baseline. The DJI Mavic 3 Thermal (M3T) works well for rooftop and small-site inspections, while the Matrice 350 RTK with a Zenmuse H20T payload gives you the precision mapping and long flight times large solar farms demand. All drones imported from China must carry the CE marking, and any operation beyond the Open category needs an AACR authorisation aligned with EASA’s Specific category. When you buy pre-owned from Reboot Hub, you skip the uncertainty of uncertified imports — every unit is bench-tested and graded by Level‑3 technicians, and the 180‑day warranty means you can get airborne with confidence faster.
Whether you’re managing a growing fleet of photovoltaic installations or you’re launching a drone inspection service in Romania, choosing the right thermal platform cuts across three practical concerns: power‑line photography, regulatory clarity, and asset reliability. The Romanian solar market is expanding fast, and the pressure to detect micro‑cracks, hot spots, and inverter faults without scaffolding is real. A thermal drone turns a two‑day manual survey into a single‑session flight — but only if the drone is built for the job and accepted by the authorities.
We work out of Shenzhen and Hong Kong supply chains, specialising in pre‑owned and refurbished DJI drones that have already proven themselves on job sites worldwide. Our MOHRSS‑certified (Level‑3) technicians perform chip‑level repair and a multi‑point bench test on every unit, then grade it either Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless. That gives you CE‑certified hardware with a transparent condition report — something that matters when you’re registering an aircraft with the Autoritatea Aeronautică Civilă Română (AACR).
Hot‑spot detection, diode defects, and delamination are invisible to the naked eye but obvious to a radiometric sensor. A thermal camera mounted on a drone captures thousands of modules in one flight, letting you pinpoint faults before they eat into energy yield. In Romania, where utility‑scale sites near the Danube and rooftop arrays in Cluj or Timișoara are popping up regularly, the ability to scan glass‑covered surfaces at an angle that avoids reflection adds real operational value.
The two workhorses we see requested most often are:
The table below aligns the machines with typical Romanian use cases, keeping the CE‑marking and import considerations front of mind.
| Model | Thermal sensor | Flight time (approx.) | Typical role in solar inspection | CE marking (manufacturer’s declaration) | Reboot Hub availability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DJI Mavic 3 Thermal | 640×512 px radiometric, 30 Hz | ~45 minutes | Rooftop and small commercial arrays, quick triage | Yes — carries CE mark as factory standard | Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless |
| DJI Matrice 350 RTK + H20T | 640×512 px radiometric, 30 Hz + laser rangefinder | ~55 minutes (with payload) | Utility‑scale sites, precision mapping, night inspections | Yes — airframe and payload both CE‑marked | Pristine Pre‑Owned set available |
| DJI Mavic 2 Enterprise Advanced | 640×512 px radiometric | ~31 minutes | Entry‑level commercial, spot‑checking | Yes — originally CE‑certified | Flawless units in rotation |
Flight times are manufacturer‑stated in ideal conditions; real‑world times will vary. All listed models are DJI‑origin drones that Reboot Hub sources, services, and ships from China with documented verification of the required CE markings.
If you’d like to dig deeper into performance differentiators, our DJI drone comparison page breaks down sensor resolutions, third‑party payload support, and flight modes that matter for photovoltaic mapping.
One of the most common questions we hear from solar business owners is: “Will a drone bought from China have the CE mark, and is it valid for Romania?”
DJI manufactures its global aircraft with regulatory marks for the intended market. Units shipped to the EU, including those sold by distributors in Shenzhen or Hong Kong, are typically supplied with a CE declaration. At Reboot Hub, we don’t just assume the sticker is there — every refurbished drone is inspected for intact compliance labels as part of our multi‑point bench test. If a label is missing or a unit was originally destined for a non‑EU region and lacks CE documentation, we flag it clearly and do not sell it as EU‑ready without an explicit disclosure. This documented verification gives you a strong indicator that the aircraft will be accepted during AACR registration, though we always recommend checking with the authority — regulation can evolve.
If you’ve purchased a drone on platforms like AliExpress for a solar business, the CE status is less predictable. Some sellers ship units with non‑EU firmware or missing CE marks, and that can lead to registration delays. A practical approach is to ask the supplier for a copy of the EU Declaration of Conformity before payment. Better still, start with a vetted source that has already done the legwork. Our drone grading standard explains exactly what we check, from physical compliance markings to flight‑controller firmware.
Disclaimer: Rules around CE marking and drone imports are updated periodically. Always verify with the Romanian customs authority and the AACR that the specific serial number you hold is accepted for commercial use.
Romania, like all EU member states, follows the EASA (European Union Aviation Safety Agency) drone regulations. Most solar panel inspections fall into the Specific category because you are flying a thermal sensor over buildings or infrastructure, and the operation may involve a heavier aircraft such as the Matrice 350 RTK.
There is no single “photovoltaic licence” issued by the AACR — what you need is an operational authorisation based on a risk assessment (often a PDRA or SORA). The basic path looks like this:
If you’re operating an FPV drone with goggles (even a DJI FPV that has been imported from China and carries CE marking), the rules can be stricter because the pilot’s visual line of sight is typically assisted. For a commercial photovoltaic inspection with FPV, you would almost certainly need a Specific category authorisation and an observer. We recommend contacting the AACR directly before purchasing an FPV system for this job and checking their latest guidance for “aided” or “beyond visual line of sight” operations.
Disclaimer: The steps above are a practical overview based on the EASA Open/Specific framework and the national CAA registration requirements. Authorisation processes and fees change. Always obtain the most current application forms from the AACR and consider engaging a local aviation consultant if you’re setting up a multi‑site operation.
Insurance is a standard operating cost, not an afterthought. Commercial drone insurance in Romania typically includes third‑party liability, hull (airframe) cover, and optionally payload coverage for the thermal camera. The cost varies with:
Because a Matrice 350 RTK with an H20T represents a higher insured value than a Mavic 3 Thermal, the premiums will reflect that. Some insurers also ask for a copy of your AACR operational authorisation before quoting. We aren’t in a position to quote an exact premium — insurance products shift — but we can share what we’ve seen in practice: operators who buy refurbished equipment often tell us that the lower replacement cost reduces their annual hull cover compared with brand‑new list prices. That makes pre‑owned a sensible lever if you’re building a fleet.
If you’d rather avoid the complexity of sourcing, insuring, and registering uncertified hardware yourself, see how our standardised grading and warranty reduces the variables you have to manage.
When you’re responsible for an 80‑hectare solar park near Bucharest or a hillside installation in Transylvania, you need more than a quick thermal scan — you need repeatable, georeferenced orthomosaics that maintenance teams can overlay on CAD plans. The Matrice 350 RTK with a Zenmuse H20T or a dedicated photogrammetry camera integrates RTK positioning directly, removing the need for ground control points on every mission. That capability speeds up data processing in software like DJI Terra or Pix4D and lowers the chance of misalignment between flights.
A common workflow:
For Romanian operators who may also fly in neighbouring countries, the same CE‑marked Matrice 350 RTK works across EU borders, though you’ll need to register the operation in each member state if you’re performing commercial services there.
Bucharest’s roof‑mounted solar panels are often located on apartment blocks, commercial centres, and industrial buildings — placing your drone directly over an urban environment. EASA rules and any additional AACR municipal restrictions apply. The key points to consider:
If your project involves flying above a commercial building inside the city limits, we recommend filing an operational declaration well in advance and attaching a map of the area with the flight radius. This documented approach helps the AACR process your application faster.
Although this guide focuses on Romania, many operators ask about similar rules in France, where the DGAC oversees drone operations. The underlying EASA framework is identical, but each national CAA can impose additional safeguards. In France, for example, commercial roof‑top inspections may require a specific “scenario” declaration (such as the now‑retired S1/S3 or the newer STS standards), and the operator registration process is handled through AlphaTango. For the most current DGAC requirements, check directly with the French aviation portal — we cannot quote a specific fee or form code.
The takeaway is that a CE‑marked drone from a trusted source will likely meet the baseline equipment standards across the EU, but the operational authorisation is always country‑specific.
Yes. Drones placed on the EU market must carry the CE mark. If you import from China, the importer is responsible for ensuring the product complies. At Reboot Hub, we verify the physical CE label and documentation during our multi‑point bench test so you have a documented starting point. Still, please check the serial number with the AACR when you register — rules shift.
You will need to register as an operator, hold the appropriate remote pilot certificate (typically A2 or a Specific category endorsement), and apply for an operational authorisation based on a risk assessment for the site you intend to fly. This is a Specific category operation under EASA rules. Contact the AACR for the current application forms and fees — we don’t cite exact amounts because they are revised periodically.
There is no fixed answer because premiums depend on the drone’s value, the area of operations, and the pilot’s experience. Operators using pre‑owned hardware often report lower hull premiums. We suggest requesting quotes from Romanian aviation insurers and presenting the refurbished asset valuation from your supplier. Ours includes a declared grade, which insurers may accept as a reliable valuation.
FPV operations introduce additional requirements because the pilot’s direct visual line of sight is limited. You will almost certainly need an AACR authorisation under the Specific category, along with a trained observer. Reach out to the AACR and describe your planned FPV setup before committing to purchase — some FPV drones imported from China might not carry the necessary C‑class markings, and the authority’s stance may change.
Yes, it is a top choice. The RTK module provides centimetre‑level positioning without extra ground control stations, and the platform can carry both a thermal and a high‑resolution visual payload for full‑farm mapping. We see Romanian solar operators using it for flight missions that exceed 30 minutes, covering hundreds of modules per battery set.
It is unlikely to be accepted by the AACR. Missing CE labelling suggests the unit was not declared compliant for the EU market, and it may lack the required firmware or electronic identification. If you already own such a drone, consult the authority — you might need to retro‑certify it, which is rarely economical. To reduce that risk from the start, source from a supplier that provides documented verification of compliance.
Ready to fly a CE‑certified thermal drone on your next Romanian solar project?
At Reboot Hub, every pre‑owned DJI drone — from the portable Mavic 3 Thermal to the enterprise‑grade Matrice 350 RTK — is put through a rigorous multi‑point bench test by MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians, graded honestly, and sold with a 180‑day warranty. That means you spend less time worrying about import paperwork and more time scanning panels. Browse our inventory, compare models side by side, and lock in a clean, documented unit that helps you meet AACR and EASA expectations from day one.
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