The DJI Mavic 2 Pro is a Mavic series DJI drone released in 2018, with 907 g, 1-inch CMOS, 4K/30fps, 31 min, 8 km, and OcuSync 2 connectivity. Reboot Hub uses this page as a technical reference for specs, compatible OEM parts, common repair planning, and inspected pre-owned buying checks.
| Model position | Mavic series DJI drone, released 2018 |
| Flight profile | 907 g takeoff weight; 31 min flight time |
| Camera profile | 1-inch CMOS; 4K/30fps video |
| Signal profile | OcuSync 2; 8 km max range |
| Repair comparison | Compare shell, arm, ESC, flex cable, GPS, vision sensor, and gimbal availability before choosing between this model and another DJI drone. |
| Buying comparison | For pre-owned units, prioritize serial verification, battery health, gimbal calibration, flight test evidence, and warranty coverage over headline price alone. |
The DJI Mavic 2 Pro is best evaluated by its weight, camera system, flight time, range, and repairability. Use the specs and parts library on this page to compare it with other DJI models before buying or repairing.
Yes. Reboot Hub maps serviceable parts for the DJI Mavic 2 Pro, including shell, arm, circuit board, flex cable, gimbal, and camera-related assemblies where available. Chip-level diagnosis is recommended when crashes, water damage, ESC faults, or gimbal errors are present.
Compare takeoff weight, sensor size, video mode, flight time, transmission system, parts availability, and warranty coverage. These factors affect image quality, travel rules, repair cost, and long-term ownership risk.
Where inventory is available, Reboot Hub lists OEM-pulled DJI parts and compatible assemblies for the DJI Mavic 2 Pro. Match the exact model, part zone, and connector generation before ordering a replacement.
Check the serial number, activation status, battery health, gimbal movement, camera focus, sensor calibration, flight logs, shell damage, and whether the seller provides a functional test video or inspection report.
The DJI Mavic 2 Pro, released in 2018 as part of the Mavic series, is a prosumer drone equipped with a 1-inch CMOS sensor that records 4K video at 30fps. It achieves a flight time of up to 31 minutes and utilizes OcuSync 2.0 transmission for a maximum range of 8 km.
| Shutter Speed | Electronic Shutter: 8–1/8000s |
| Takeoff Weight | 907 g |
| Dimensions | Folded: |
| Max Ascent Speed | 5 m/s (S-mode) |
| Max Descent Speed | 3 m/s (S-mode) |
| Max Speed (near sea level, no wind) | 72 kph (S-mode) |
| Maximum Takeoff Altitude | 6000 m |
| Max Flight Time (no wind) | 31 minutes (at a consistent 25 kph) |
| Max Hovering Time (no wind) | 29 minutes |
| Max Flight Distance (no wind) | 18 km (at a consistent 50 kph) |
| Max Wind Speed Resistance | 29–38 kph |
| Max Pitch Angle | 35° (S-mode, with remote controller) 25° (P-mode) |
| Operating Temperature Range | -10°C to 40°C |
| GNSS | GPS+GLONASS |
| Hovering Accuracy Range | Vertical: |
| Internal Storage | 8 GB |
| Max Control Speed (tilt) | 120° /s |
| Net Weight | 297 g |
| Sensor | 1” CMOS |
| Lens | FOV: about 77° |
| ISO Range | Video: 100-6400 Photo: 100-3200 (auto) 100-12800 (manual) |
| Still Image Size | 5472×3648 |
| Still Photography Modes | Single shot |
| Video Resolution | 4K: 3840×2160 24/25/30p |
| Max Video Bitrate | 100Mbps |
| Color Mode | Dlog-M (10bit), support HDR video (HLG 10bit) |
| Supported File System | FAT32 (≤ 32 GB) |
| Photo Format | JPEG / DNG (RAW) |
| Video Format | MP4 / MOV (MPEG-4 AVC/H.264, HEVC/H.265) |
| Max Live View Bitrate | 12Mbps |
| Mechanical Range | Tilt: -135–45° Pan: -100–100° |
| Controllable Range | Tilt: -90–30° Pan: -75–75° |
| Stabilization | 3-axis (tilt, roll, pan) |
| Angular Vibration Range | ±0.01° (Mavic 2 Pro) |
| Sensing System | Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing1 |
| Forward | Precision Measurement Range: 0.5 - 20 m |
| Backward | Precision Measurement Range: 0.5 - 16 m |
| Upward | Precision Measurement Range: 0.1 - 8 m |
| Downward | Precision Measurement Range: 0.5 - 11 m |
| Operating Environment | Forward, Backward and Sides: |
| Operating Frequency | 2.400 - 2.483 GHz |
| Transmission Power (EIRP) | 2.400 - 2.483 GHz FCC:≤26 dBm CE:≤20 dBm SRRC:≤20 dBm MIC:≤20 dBm 5.725-5.850 GHz FCC:≤26 dBm CE:≤14 dBm SRRC:≤26 dBm |
| Max Transmission Distance (unobstructed, free of interference) | 2.400 - 2.483 GHz; 5.725 - 5.850 GHz |
| Video Transmission System | OcuSync 2.0 |
| Live View Quality | Remote Controller: |
| Diagonal Distance | 354 mm |
| Max Angular Velocity | 200°/s |
| Sides | Precision Measurement Range: 0.5 - 10 m |
| Battery | 3950 mAh |
| Operating Current/Voltage | 1800 mA ⎓ 3.83 V |
| Supported USB Port Types | Lightning, Micro USB (Type-B), USB-C |
| Voltage | 17.6 ± 0.1 V |
| Rated Power | 60 W |
| Name | DJI GO 4 |
| Latency (depending on environmental conditions and mobile device) | 120 - 130 ms |
| Supported SD Cards | Micro SD™ Supports a microSD with capacity of up to 128 GB. A UHS-I Speed Grade 3 rating microSD card is required. |
| Footnotes | [1] Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing includes left/right, up/down, and forward/backward obstacle sensing. Sensing for left/right directions is only available in ActiveTrack , POI, QuickShot and Tripod mode. Omnidirectional Obstacle Sensing does not fully cover the circumference of a 360-degree arc. And left and right obstacle sensing system only works in specific modes and environments. DJI warranty does not cover any loss caused by crashing when flying left or right, even when ActiveTrack or Tripod mode is activated. Please be aware of your surroundings and App notifications when operating the Mavic 2 to ensure safety. |
Symptoms: Cracked shell, bent arm, loose landing gear, abnormal vibration, or visible crash damage.
Likely areas: outer shell, arms, landing gear, motor mounts
Inspect the airframe before powering on and verify the exact replacement part against the model variant.
Symptoms: Motor start failure, rough spin, propulsion warning, overheating, or unstable hover.
Likely areas: motor, arm wiring, ESC board, power connectors
Check for impact damage, cable strain, and water exposure before replacing boards or motors.
Symptoms: Camera shake, gimbal overload warning, tilted horizon, calibration failure, or no camera image.
Likely areas: gimbal assembly, vibration board, camera module, gimbal flex cable
Avoid forcing the gimbal by hand and recalibrate after any gimbal or camera service.
Symptoms: Positioning drift, obstacle sensing warning, compass or IMU calibration prompt, or unstable low-altitude hover.
Likely areas: vision sensors, IMU, GPS/GNSS board, sensor flex cables
Clean sensor windows and verify calibration after shell, sensor, or board replacement.
Confirm the exact model, variant, error message, and visible damage before selecting parts. Do not substitute parts from a similar model without verification.
Remove the battery before opening the aircraft. Check for moisture, corrosion, and overheated connectors before reconnecting power.
Flex cables and coaxial cables are fragile. Route them without sharp bends and inspect connector locks before closing the shell.
After replacing gimbal, vision, GNSS, IMU, shell, arm, or propulsion parts, run the required calibration and perform a controlled low-altitude test.
Parts Atlas is being mapped from verified Reboot Hub inventory. Model specs and repair guidance are available below.
Browse verified partsVerified batteries, controllers, goggles, propellers, and accessories mapped from Reboot Hub inventory for this model.
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