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Tuesday, August 19, 2025
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HomeGadgetsFor Drone Owners Only - Waypoints and Elevation

For Drone Owners Only – Waypoints and Elevation

While sitting at home feeling sorry for myself with summer flu, I’m filling in time between coughs and sneezes by learning how and why to use waypoints (step by step route markers) for my DJI Mini 4 Pro drone.

Why? Well, at my age, controlling the drone around a route still only partly formed in my head, panning and turning left and right, moving up and down all while adjusting the camera elevation (and possibly zoom) as well as ensuring I’m videoing only what I need so as to avoid editing huge video files – is DOABLE but I got it into my head that there must be a better way?

So I’m sitting in my oddice in front of the DJI RC2 controller (which includes screen but the principle is not specific to this controller) looking at a map of our “street” in a hilly, rural part of Southern Spain – and I thought – for starters I’ll plot a route from our house to the end of the road, via the roundabout just down from our house. Our house is “Bedrock” and shows near enough in google maps – a plus as I can’t describe HOW rural we are – i.e. in the middle of no-where.

For Drone Owners Only – Waypoints and Elevation

So in the image, right, you’ll see Bedrock at the far left and I want to plan a trip via the roundabout to the far right of that image using a set of waypoints (just as a starting example). First hurdle, Google maps in default view has no idea we have a roundabout. On the drone, the map can see our tiny roundabout – but no height information. Google Maps on the PC while Selecting LAYERS at the bottom corner again shows the roundabout but no road height compared to our house entrance. This is where Google EARTH comes in. I hope this makes sense.. See image below..

My DJI waypoints manually adjusted  manually thanks to Google Earth on the  PC

In above image – our house is shown as “Scargill Tech” on the left instead of Bedrock as in Google Maps – you’d never think the same company made both of these mapping systems. Follow that Calle Ceuta road up and right to the end which is the top of our hill.

Why is any of this relevant? Because – the drone software does not automatically compensate for hills – and videos out there tend to concentrate on relatively flat areas. If I plot a nice route from our house to the top right of that image i.e. the junction… all great but check out this NEXT image…

image 8

I chose as my starting height 25m to avoid annoying anyone. So with some REALLY simple button pressing on the map on the controller, I’ve made a route from our house (waypoint 1) to the end of the road (waypoint 7). For clarity, the drone will fly a smooth path from 1 to 7 when I press GO.. and note on Waypoint 7, I ‘ve set the camera turn around to face home (arrowhead to the left of waypoint 7 faces the other way to the rest of the waypoints). I also set the video recording to start at waypoint 1 and stop at waypoint 7. All of this in my office with the drone on standby all this time – not actually doing anything – indeed it didn’t actually need to be turned on at all. Total planned flight distance 180m. At any time I can go in and edit any of those waypoints then save the lot for use at any time.

All very good but for two things… the height stated in the image above way originally to be 25m above our houe entrance road – and the height in the image above only changes to accommodate the valley in the middle because I manually did that – otherwise it would be the same height throughout – relative to my HOME, not the location under the drone. Wow. The collision-avoidance software would stop the drone ending up in danger (and in this case the middle of the flight is in a a valley, not over a hill) but I really wanted the drone to follow the terrain height – enter Google EARTH which, given a point on the map, will HAPPILY show the exact elevation of that point on the bottom right of the screen – so some simple subtraction allows me to specify for any waypoint, the exact height above sea level of that surface.

That alone was a comprehension game changer for me… reducing the chance to zero of a random passer-by getting annoyed by the drone sound – my only remaining issue was EASILY altering each waypoint position to heep the drone over the road. NOT trivial using a large finger on the controller.

My NEXT eureka moment was realising that I have a spare BT mouse and that the controller has BT, normally turned off in the settings – so I turned it on and paired the mouse to the controller. NOW I can in theory adjust those waypoints like a pro…

See waypoint 4, I just precisely moved it off the road temporarily using the mouse. Wheee. Had I kept this setting I’d have used my new found info to adjust the height for that waypoint as that is not flat land.

My DJI waypoints manually adjusted  manually thanks to Google Earth on the  PC

Did I need the aircraft turned on for all of this? No – good job I’ve a handy charger so I’m erady to try this for real tomorrow.

In case this all sounds a little abstract -my first drone flight over a particularly huge lake in our area nearly ended up in disaster with my previous DJI Mini 2… Down at the beach near the water’s edge I started the drone up and sent it around the lake manually at 10m above the water – great – and on it’s return I sent it all the way up the hill to an empty car park at the top to land at what I thought was a safe height to avoid trees….. I just HAPPENED to notice that by the time the drone reached the top – it was no longer anywhere near 10m above ground level and was only JUST enough to clear the high trees…. I’d just ASSUMED the drone would adjust height along the way to keep the same distance above ground – erm, no.

How, if DJI are looking in, is there any way you could add an OPTION to dynamically adjust the height of the drone relevant to the ground under the drone? Good usage example? Maybe you start by setting the drone to stay safely below or above any pylon cables? The anti-collision code would stop the drone accidentally hitting a pylon, but thin actual cables are often missed by both cameras and eyes…

Knowing all our rural pylons are the same height, knowing the exact cable height above ground and avoiding that height could be another game changer.

I hope this is useful to someone. It has ramped my confidence up marvelously. earlty today I was still getting to grips with waypoints would you believe.

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