The CAA has issued a further safety notice (recalling the one about the DJI Matrice) regarding safety issues with the use of DJI TB50 & TB55 batteries which affect all DJI Inspire 2 & Matrice users. SAFETY NOTICE Number: SN–2018/009
1 Introduction
1.1 This Safety Notice supersedes and revokes Safety Notice SN–2018/008.
1.2 This Safety Notice applies to operators of multi-rotor small unmanned aircraft utilising DJI battery model TB50 or TB55, including all DJI Matrice 200 series (which includes the 200, 210 and 210 RTK platforms) and the DJI Inspire 2 (the “Affected SUA”).
1.3 A small number of incidents have been recently reported where the aircraft has suffered a complete loss of power during flight, despite indications that there was sufficient battery time still remaining. In each case, this resulted in the aircraft falling directly to the ground due to the immediate loss of lift with the remote pilot unable to control its subsequent flight path. The small unmanned aircraft were damaged upon impact, but the CAA has not received any reports of injuries to people or other property.
1.4 Investigation by the manufacturer has confirmed that this issue is not confined to any specific firmware version and is thought to be related to the batteries TB50 and TB55. The full details of the occurrences are still being investigated.
1.5 The purpose of this Safety Notice is to highlight the requirement for the SUA operator and/or remote pilot to be reasonably satisfied that the flight can be safely made (Air Navigation Order 2016 (ANO) article 94(2)), restrict overflight of persons at any height and to temporarily limit the scope of any operational authorisations issued to operators of the Affected SUA.
2 Compliance/Action to be Taken
2.1 This Safety Notice requires the following actions to be taken:
a) Provisional Suspension of Operations
i) In accordance with Air Navigation Order article 257 and 257(2)(c) operators of Affected SUA are hereby directed not to permit any flight that involves overflight of any persons, whether or not they are under the control of the operator or remote-pilot, at any height until further notice.
ii) In accordance with Air Navigation Order article 253, any element of any permission or exemption, including Standard Permissions and Operating Safety Cases, issued by the CAA to an SUA operator which permits the operation of an Affected SUA to be operated:
- over or within 150 metres of any congested area;
- within 50 metres of any person;
- within 50 metres of any, vessel, vehicle or structure which is not under the control of the SUA Operator or remote pilot of the SUA;
- over or within 150 metres of an open - air assembly of more than 1,000 persons; or • using Extended Visual Line of Sight (EVLOS)
iii) These limitations will be subject to regular review. As soon as further updates have been obtained from the manufacturer, and the CAA is satisfied that this has been addressed in a satisfactory manner, the CAA will then issue a further update via the SkyWise alerts portal on the CAA website.
b) Emergency Services Operations
i) Due to the unique nature of emergency services operations, the privileges contained within General Exemption E 4506 (ORS4 No. 1233) may continue to be exercised whilst using the Affected SUA, provided that the potential risks highlighted in this Safety Notice have been considered within the decision to proceed and the overflight of uninvolved persons is minimised.
3 Queries
3.1 Any queries or requests for further guidance as a result of this communication should be addressed to the following e-mail address: uavenquiries@caa.co.uk, with the subject line ‘Safety Notice - DJI Battery TB50 and TB55 In-Flight Power Failures’.
4 Cancellation
4.1 This Safety Notice will remain in force until further notice
Summary
Do not fly a DJI Inspire 2 or DJI Matrice 200 series that are powered by TB50 or TB55 batteries over, or in close proximity to, people or property that could be injured or damaged in the event of a power loss.
Limit your operational use of the aircraft(s) until further notice whilst DJI and the CAA continue to investigate.
The issue is not restricted to a particular firmware.
For the latest information, check the SkyWise alerts portal on the CAA website.