Reboot Hub · Buying Guide
Updated June 12, 2026
Quick Answer - Check warranty: Reboot Hub provides a 180‑day refurbished warranty that covers defects on drones used for surveying. - ANAC & ANATEL: Register your drone with ANAC; check ANATEL homologation requirements before sending a unit back to China for radio‑related repairs. - Data safety: Always wipe archaeological survey data from onboard storage before shipping a drone for motherboard repair. - Cross‑border taxes: Use temporary‑admission regimes (SUNAT in Peru, DIAN’s tools in Colombia) to manage duties on repaired drones returning from China. - Reboot Hub advantage: Multi‑point bench‑tested pre‑owned drones lower the chance of early defects, so international warranty claims stay rare.
Professional surveying with drones is reshaping how Brazil maps its terrain, monitors infrastructure, and documents archaeological sites. The economics often lead operators to buy refurbished equipment from the Shenzhen supply chain: a high‑precision DJI drone that has been graded and restored by MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians can deliver the same centimetre‑level accuracy as new, at a fraction of the upfront cost. But when a gimbal starts drifting, a motherboard fails, or an RTK module loses lock, the international warranty journey begins. This guide lays out a practical, peer‑to‑peer roadmap for handling those defects, navigating Brazilian (and regional) regulations, and keeping your mapping projects airborne without burning budget on avoidable tax surprises. Reboot Hub’s standard—multi‑point bench‑tested units shipped from our Shenzhen/Hong Kong facility—already reduces the risk of receiving a faulty drone. That’s the first layer of protection.
Before a refurbished drone ever leaves China, it passes through a multi‑point bench test that covers sensors, motors, gimbal calibration, flight controller logs, and camera alignment. Technicians hold the MOHRSS Level‑3 certification, which means they are qualified for chip‑level repair—the kind of deep hardware expertise that keeps repair shipments to a minimum. Units are categorised as “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless,” and each one comes with a 180‑day warranty. The grading process is transparent; you can review how it works at The Reboot Hub Standard. While no pre‑owned programme can erase every risk of an in‑field fault, starting with a drone that has already been re‑qualified to a high standard makes international warranty service a rare event rather than a constant worry.
The 180‑day warranty included with every Reboot Hub refurbished drone covers manufacturing and workmanship defects that arise during normal surveying use. If a gimbal motor burns out, an RTK module stops communicating, or a motherboard begins throwing intermittent errors, the warranty may cover the repair—including the labour and parts at our Shenzhen bench. Exclusions are the usual ones: crash damage, water exposure, third‑party modifications, and consumables like propellers. The full policy is spelled out on the Warranty Policy page.
Because the repair facility is in China, the warranty claim involves an international shipment. That’s where most questions from Latin American and European operators cluster: how to send a drone from Brazil to China and get it back without paying full import duties twice, how to keep ANATEL and ANAC satisfied, and what to do with sensitive survey data during board‑level repairs. The following sections address each of those layers.
Brazil requires drones above 250 g used for professional purposes to be registered with the National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC). If your surveying drone is already in the ANAC register, that registration remains valid even while the drone is temporarily abroad for repair. We recommend keeping the registration certificate handy in digital form; it can serve as evidence that the drone is Brazilian‑based and intended for return.
A second entity that often surprises operators is ANATEL, the national telecommunications agency. Drones with radio transmitters (Wi‑Fi, OcuSync, RTK) need ANATEL homologation. When a radio module is replaced or a motherboard containing the transmitter is repaired, re‑importing the drone could technically require a fresh homologation. In practice, if the replacement part is identical to the original and the drone’s model is already homologated, the process is generally straightforward—but ANATEL’s interpretation can vary. Before shipping any drone that will have its radio circuitry touched, check with ANATEL or a compliance consultant. Doing so helps you avoid a surprise at customs.
When you send a drone from Brazil to China for warranty or paid repair, you are not permanently exporting it. Brazil’s customs regime allows for temporary exportation with re‑importation, and if you follow the right procedure, you can avoid paying import duties on the full value of the drone when it returns. The duty should instead be calculated only on the value added by the repair (parts and labour), and in many warranty cases, even that may be exempt. The key is paperwork: a temporary export declaration, a detailed description of the fault, a commercial or warranty repair invoice from Reboot Hub, and the original purchase receipt. We strongly advise working with a licensed customs broker who handles Brazilian “Drawback” or temporary‑admission regimes—rules change and local port interpretations can differ.
For operators in Peru, the SUNAT process follows a similar logic. Peru’s Temporary Admission for Active Improvement (TA) regime enables you to export a good for repair abroad and re‑import it with duties suspended on the original asset. You will need to show the warranty documentation and the repair invoice. The step‑by‑step typically involves filing a temporary admission declaration with SUNAT, shipping the drone, then presenting the repair invoice on return to close the regime. Again, confirm the current forms and deadlines with SUNAT or a local agent—this article cannot replace official guidance.
Colombian operators face an analogous situation with DIAN. The online tax calculator (often accessed via the Muisca platform) can simulate the likely duties and VAT on the repair cost if you re‑import the drone under a temporary‑admission or “importación temporal para reexportación en el mismo estado” scheme. Because tariff codes and rates shift, we advise running the DIAN calculator at the time of the repair to get an estimate before committing. The calculator factors in the repair invoice value, freight, and insurance.
Beyond Brazil, other jurisdictions have their own telecom regulators. Peru has the Ministry of Transport and Communications (MTC); Colombia has the ANE (Agencia Nacional del Espectro). If a motherboard swap involves a radio change, re‑homologation may be required. The good news is that replacement with an identical OEM part rarely triggers a full certification cycle. Still, checking with the regulator before you ship reduces the chance of an unpleasant hold. The same principle applies across Latin America and in Italy (where ENAC and the Ministry of Economic Development handle civil aviation and radio aspects, respectively).
Archaeological photogrammetry drones carry highly sensitive data: geo‑referenced ortho‑photos, 3D point clouds of undisclosed sites, and sometimes even temporary research permits linked to individuals. When a motherboard must be repaired in China, operators ask whether this violates GDPR or its Brazilian counterpart, the LGPD.
The most effective protection is simple: backup all data and then perform a full factory reset and secure wipe of the drone’s internal storage before shipping. Once the drone is empty, no personal data (or site‑linking metadata) will leave the country. Reboot Hub’s repair procedure does not access or retain user data beyond what is necessary for functional bench testing, and we reinforce this with internal protocols that respect data privacy. If, for some exceptional reason, data cannot be removed—perhaps the storage is soldered and the fault prevents wipe—the minimal data needed for testing stays confined to the repair bench and is deleted after quality assurance.
From a GDPR perspective, a professional drone operator in Italy or elsewhere in the EU should treat the shipment as a data‑controller action. You may need a Data Protection Impact Assessment and a set of contractual clauses with the repairer. While Reboot Hub is not in a position to provide legal advice, we cooperate fully with any documented data‑processing instructions you provide. Always consult your Data Protection Officer or the Garante per la protezione dei dati personali to confirm that your approach meets the current regulatory standard. The same guidance applies under Brazil’s LGPD—check with the ANPD or your compliance team.
Gimbal failures are among the most common warranty claims on survey drones because constant pitch and yaw adjustments strain motors and ribbon cables. If your drone is still under the 180‑day Reboot Hub warranty and the gimbal has not suffered an impact, the repair is typically covered. The process looks like this:
If your drone is outside the warranty period, Reboot Hub will provide a transparent cost estimate before beginning any out‑of‑pocket repair. While we cannot quote a fixed fee (gimbal part prices and exchange rates fluctuate), the “sostituire gimbal drone per fotogrammetria archeologica costo e procedura dalla Cina” that you may read about in forums always starts with the same professional workflow we just described. Budget for two‑way shipping and any outsourced customs paperwork; the repair itself is competitively priced thanks to our direct access to the Shenzhen supply chain.
If you’d rather not do every cross‑border check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard. Each refurbished drone is multi‑point bench‑tested and graded before shipment—reducing the chance you’ll need international warranty service in the first place. Explore the standard
Operators who buy refurbished often weigh several models before settling on the one that fits their photogrammetry or topographic workflow. The table below lists popular DJI platforms, their typical survey roles, and the Reboot Hub grades most commonly available. Because inventory turns over quickly, specific models may appear in “Pristine Pre‑Owned” or “Flawless” condition depending on the batch.
| Drone Model | Primary Survey Application | Typical Reboot Hub Grade |
|---|---|---|
| DJI Phantom 4 RTK | High‑accuracy mapping, archaeological photogrammetry, cadastral surveys | Pristine Pre‑Owned / Flawless |
| DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise | Rapid site reconnaissance, thermal inspection, small‑area mapping | Pristine Pre‑Owned |
| DJI Matrice 300 RTK | Heavy‑lift LiDAR integration, corridor mapping, multispectral payloads | Flawless (availability varies) |
A full side‑by‑side of the latest lineup is available on our DJI Drone Comparison 2026 page. Whatever model you choose, knowing that the unit has passed a rigorous bench test and is backed by a 180‑day warranty gives you a predictable baseline when planning a survey campaign.
Use this table as a starting point before shipping a Refurbished Drone from China for repair. It is not a substitute for professional advice; consult authorities in your jurisdiction.
| Country | Telecom / Radio Authority | Customs Regime for Repaired Drone Re‑import | Data Privacy Consideration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | ANATEL – homologation check if radio module replaced | Temporary export with “Drawback” or warranty exemption; work with a broker | LGPD – wipe survey data before shipment |
| Peru | MTC – verify that replacement part keeps existing type approval | SUNAT Temporary Admission for Active Improvement (TA) | Local data protection law applies; data wipe recommended |
| Colombia | ANE – similar homologation principle | DIAN temporary‑admission scheme; use Muisca calculator to estimate duties | Data wipe before sending; consult local legal advisor |
| Italy (EU) | Ministry of Economic Development / ENAC for aviation aspects | EU Outward Processing procedure; professional customs broker recommended | GDPR – DPO involvement, possible data transfer safeguards |
Disclaimer: Rules, tariff codes, and regulator interpretations change. Always verify the latest requirements with your national aviation authority, telecom regulator, customs broker, and (where relevant) your data protection officer before shipping your drone internationally.
First, ensure your drone is registered with ANAC if it weighs above 250 g. Then, before shipping, check with ANATEL whether the planned repair (especially any radio module replacement) requires re‑homologation. Prepare a temporary export declaration with your customs broker, ship the drone without batteries, and keep all warranty documents. On return, ANAC registration remains valid, and ANATEL issues should be cleared in advance.
Back up all data from the drone’s internal storage and perform a factory reset plus secure wipe before shipping. If data cannot be wiped, consult your Data Protection Officer about necessary data transfer safeguards. Reboot Hub’s repair protocol does not retain user data beyond functional testing, and we can follow your documented processing instructions.
We do not publish fixed gimbal replacement prices because part costs and exchange rates vary. The procedure starts with contacting Reboot Hub Support for an RMA, shipping the drone (without batteries), receiving a transparent cost estimate, and then having our MOHRSS Level‑3 technicians perform chip‑level repair and recalibration. Two‑way shipping and any customs broker fees are separate.
Peru’s SUNAT allows a Temporary Admission for Active Improvement. You will need the warranty documentation, an RMA from Reboot Hub, and a temporary admission declaration filed through a customs agent. When the repaired drone returns, duties apply only to the repair cost—and in warranty cases may be exempt. Confirm the current forms directly with SUNAT.
Use DIAN’s Muisca platform or the official “Calculadora de Tributos Aduaneros.” Enter the repair invoice value, freight, and insurance under a temporary‑admission HS code. The calculator will give you an indicative VAT and duty amount. Because rates can change, run the simulation at the time of repair.
Yes, the 180‑day refurbished warranty covers defects that arise during normal surveying use—gimbal motor failures, RTK module problems, motherboard issues—as long as there is no crash or water damage. Coverage runs from the date of delivery. Review the full terms on our Warranty Policy page.
A refurbished drone from China, supplied with a documented warranty and a pre‑qualification standard that reduces early failure risks, is one of the most cost‑effective ways to scale a surveying business in Latin America or Europe. Reboot Hub’s multi‑point bench‑tested and graded inventory, backed by MOHRSS Level‑3 chip‑level expertise, gives you the operational certainty you need when every map and 3D model depends on reliable hardware.
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