Drone Guides
When monsoon rains swell Jakarta’s rivers and low-lying kampungs turn into dark, debris-filled lakes within hours, every minute counts. Rescuers in rubber boats can only cover so much ground, and even powerful handheld torches struggle to pierce muddy water. A thermal-equipped drone changes that equation — it reads heat, not light, and can direct a search team straight toward a person clinging to a rooftop or a tree branch long before a boat arrives.
That promise of speed is why agencies and volunteer SAR groups across Southeast Asia are turning to platforms like the DJI Mavic 3 Thermal. Yet owning a capable thermal drone and operating it effectively in Jakarta’s chaotic flood environment are two very different things. At Reboot Hub, our MOHRSS Level‑3 certified technicians in China (Shenzhen/Hong Kong supply chain) put every refurbished unit through a multi‑point bench test precisely because we know these machines get thrown into high‑stakes missions. This guide walks you through what actually matters when you take a Mavic 3 Thermal into the night for flood victim search — and how to think about gear choices, weather limits, budgets, and regional rules without learning the hard way.
Visible‑light cameras, even with strong onboard LEDs, rarely deliver usable imagery over wide flooded zones at night. Water absorbs and scatters light, while reflections from wet surfaces confuse object recognition. A radiometric thermal sensor picks up temperature differences instead. A human body at roughly 36 °C glows against floodwater that often measures in the mid‑20s, creating a stark signature that remains visible through light drizzle, humidity, and typical urban haze.
For the DJI Mavic 3 Thermal, this means you are not just looking — you are measuring temperature pixel by pixel. That capability lets you set a temperature alarm (isotherm) so the controller vibrates or highlights anything within a human‑body temperature band. In a nighttime flood search over Jakarta, this feature alone often cuts scanning time in half compared to a standard visual camera.
Because user intent often crosses over into dense forests (like West Java’s mountainous terrain) and flood‑ravaged urban neighbourhoods, it helps to have a repeatable camera profile for human search. The recommendations below are based on operational patterns we see from experienced pilots. They are not “the only way,” but they form a solid starting line.
When you spot a heat signature, you will likely want to flip to the visible‑light camera for a quick confirmation. For nighttime, forget about expecting a clear colour picture. Instead:
The question surfaces again and again when Jakarta floods: Is the DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise waterproof for flood surveys in South Jakarta during rain? The short, calibrated answer is no. DJI has not assigned any official ingress‑protection (IP) rating to the Mavic 3 series. The airframe has some splash‑resistant touches — such as covered ports and a sealed battery compartment — but those are meant for light moisture and fog, not driving tropical rain. Operating in a heavy downpour exposes the motors, vents, and sensor housings to water that can short electronics or corrode contacts over time.
That does not mean you have to ground the drone the moment clouds gather. A few practical field habits lower the chance of damage:
SAR coordinators often ask whether filing a warranty claim after water damage is possible. Most warranties, including the 180‑day warranty Reboot Hub provides on refurbished units, do not cover water ingress from flight in rain, because the operator is expected to avoid conditions beyond the manufacturer’s published limits. Treat weather caution as an investment in your drone’s longevity.
Alongside flood victim search, regional buyers use thermal drones for solar‑panel inspection, construction monitoring, and wildlife surveys. Two DJI models consistently come up in comparisons: the Mavic 3 Enterprise Thermal and the Matrice 30 Thermal. The table below spells out the differences that matter most when you’re flying over Indonesia’s wet, sometimes dusty, and often unpredictable environments.
| Capability | DJI Mavic 3 Thermal | DJI Matrice 30 Thermal |
|---|---|---|
| Weather resistance | No official IP rating; light-moisture only | IP55-rated; designed for rain, dust, and harsh weather |
| Thermal sensor | 640×512 px radiometric | 640×512 px radiometric |
| Zoom camera | Up to 56× hybrid zoom (visible) | Up to 200× hybrid zoom, plus laser rangefinder |
| Flight time (typical) | Around 40–45 minutes | Around 40 minutes |
| Portability | Folds to fit a compact bag; ~920 g | Larger, requires a dedicated case; around 4 kg |
| Deployment speed | Under a minute from bag to air | Slightly longer setup; feels bulkier in narrow boats |
| Best use case | Rapid‑response SAR, small‑site inspection, café security, wildlife monitoring where you move often | Industrial inspection, all‑weather flood survey, missions that demand high‑zoom identification |
| Pre‑owned availability | Widely available through refurbished programs | Less common on the second‑hand market, higher resale value |
If your primary scenario is nighttime flood victim search in Jakarta’s narrow, obstacle‑filled kampungs, the Mavic 3 Thermal often wins on agility and discreetness. But if your work extends to solar‑farm inspections in rural Sulawesi during showery months, or you need to read a license plate from 200 metres away, the Matrice 30 Thermal’s weather‑proofing and superior zoom are hard to ignore. Many Indonesian operators start with a pre‑owned Mavic 3 Thermal, build their SOPs, and eventually add a Matrice when budget allows.
For a broader DJI drone comparison covering models beyond these two, have a look at our drone comparison resource; it includes grading perspectives that can help you weigh upfront cost against field reliability.
A new Mavic 3 Thermal bundle can be a significant stretch for a small café owner wanting nighttime perimeter monitoring, or for a conservation NGO tracking nocturnal wildlife in West Java. A pre‑owned unit, when sourced from a program that provides documented technical check‑out, often delivers the same thermal sensitivity at a noticeably lower investment.
What should you look for? The phrase “bekas” (used) alone doesn’t tell the full story. We recommend examining:
If you’d rather not do every check yourself, see the Reboot Hub standard — we handle the multi‑point bench testing so you can focus on the mission, whether that’s a flood‑affected neighborhood or a wildlife corridor.
Thermal drones are indeed powerful for nocturnal wildlife observation — researchers routinely use them to census deer, wild boar, and primates without disturbing the animals. Some buyers ask about monitoring the Javan tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica). The scientific consensus holds that this subspecies is extinct, and no verified sightings have occurred in decades. If the goal is general wildlife protection or anti‑poaching patrol, a pre‑owned Mavic 3 Thermal offers an economical way to cover large blocks of forest at night. Just make sure any surveillance activity aligns with Indonesia’s conservation laws; check with the relevant wildlife authority for permit requirements before flying over protected areas.
For a small café seeking a security solution, the same tool transitions seamlessly: a single automated thermal orbit at closing time can reveal a person’s heat bloom behind a fence far faster than a dozen motion‑triggered lamps.
Jakarta’s airspace is complex. Even during a declared emergency, civilian drones operate under rules from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation. Before spinning up:
Start from a high, dry point. If the water is rising, resist the temptation to launch from a knee‑deep doorstep; electrical shorts from splashing can disable your controller while the drone is still airborne.
Flood water can create deceptive “hot spots”:
When you see a strong heat signature, resist the urge to descend immediately. Low‑altitude propeller wash over water can push a weak swimmer away and create dangerous waves. Instead:
Plan your return with a generous buffer; wind and current can double the power needed for the home leg. Land with at least 25% battery remaining. If you’re swapping batteries in the field, keep the spare packs inside a waterproof bag with silica gel packs — Jakarta’s humidity is unforgiving on battery terminals.
Operational requirements for drones in Indonesia — including nighttime operations, flights over people, and emergency waivers — are set by the national civil aviation authority and can change. This article outlines general practices and field wisdom; it does not state specific legal thresholds. Rules that apply during a government‑declared disaster may differ from normal limitations. Always verify the current framework with the relevant national aviation authority before deploying any drone for SAR work. Similarly, data protection rules may affect how you handle imagery that captures identifiable individuals or private property. A short pre‑flight call to the local police precinct can prevent misunderstandings later.
For West Java’s forested terrain, start with the White Hot palette on high gain. Activate the isotherm between 25 °C and 38 °C — cooler soil and foliage will drop out, leaving warm bodies visible even through light canopy gaps. Fly slower than you would over open water; 3–4 m/s gives the sensor time to register a partial heat print. If the forest is extremely dense, lowering the altitude and using a narrower‑overlap grid improves the chance of detecting a hiker, though canopy‑penetrating signatures are always partial.
It is not waterproof, and DJI does not advertise an IP rating for the Mavic 3 series. Flying in heavy rain exposes internal electronics to moisture that can cause immediate failure or delayed corrosion. A practical approach is to wait for a break in the precipitation, launch from a sheltered spot, and dry the drone thoroughly after each flight. For missions that demand continuous rain operation, you might look at drones with certified weather sealing — but even then, verify locally what your insurance or warranty will cover.
While we can’t quote a fixed price because inventory changes, a pre‑owned Mavic 3 Thermal typically sells for a meaningful discount compared to new retail, often bringing thermal security within reach for a small business. The key is not just the purchase price but the condition: a unit that has been through a multi‑point bench test and comes with a clear grading — like our Pristine Pre‑Owned or Flawless grades — lowers the chance of an unexpected repair bill six months later. That predictability is what makes the business case work for a café owner who wants reliable nighttime monitoring without a 24‑hour guard.
Both carry the same thermal sensor resolution, so they detect hot cells equally well. The decision usually hinges on weather and access. If your solar farm is in a high‑humidity coastal region where sudden showers are common, the IP55‑rated Matrice 30 Thermal can keep flying when the Mavic 3 would need to land. The Matrice’s powerful zoom‑and‑laser setup also helps you identify a specific panel’s serial number from a safe distance. If portability and faster setup matter more — say, you’re inspecting scattered rooftop arrays across Jakarta — the Mavic 3 Thermal is lighter and can be airborne within a minute. Many inspection teams eventually own both.
The thermal capabilities are well‑suited to nocturnal wildlife surveys generally. The Javan tiger, however, is classified as extinct by the scientific community, so a search for it would not reflect current conservation data. That said, a refurbished Mavic 3 Thermal is regularly used for monitoring other species — wild boar, deer, and macaques — in West Java and beyond. We always recommend confirming permit requirements with Indonesia’s wildlife authority before conducting aerial surveys over protected habitats.
Check GPS lock and home‑point accuracy; test the isotherm alarm against a known warm object (a teammate’s hand) to confirm it triggers correctly; verify that all batteries, including the controller and tablet, are above 80%; and brief a visual observer on the flight path. Most importantly, confirm with the incident commander or local police that no manned rescue aircraft are operating in the same airspace. A quick coordination call reduces the risk of conflict in an already stressful environment.
Nighttime flood victim search is demanding work. It punishes unprepared equipment and rewards thorough, honest maintenance. Whether you are equipping a volunteer SAR post in Jakarta, a conservation team in the foothills, or a small business that simply wants better nighttime awareness, a pre‑owned Mavic 3 Thermal that has been properly graded and bench‑tested can transform the way you see the dark.
Browse our current inventory of certified refurbished Mavic 3 Thermal units, compare models using the DJI drone comparison page, and read about the Reboot Hub standard to understand why each drone comes with a 180‑day warranty. When the next storm hits, you’ll want a tool that has already proven its pulse on the bench — not one you’re still crossing your fingers about.
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