as i understand it....
until june 2022, we are in a transition period, so drones are being judge pretty much by weight, hence dji fpv can be flown in A2 with A2 competency cert, or A3 (with a1/a3)
from June 2022,
any drone with C marking will become a legacy drone.
legacy drone < 250g, can fly in A1-A3, legacy drones > 250g only A3
(they wont gain a classification, rather are just assigned where they can fly in the open category)
the EU has stated they would allow retro-classificication
I asked DJI about this, and was told. (my emphasis
)
they are
hoping to be able to provide a service where
some drones can be returned to them for retro-classication, but at the time they were not able to comment which models this would be availabe for, or cost.
as yet there are NO C rated drones on the market, DJI told me (in March) that the whilst they were working with the EU on this - nothing was finalised, in particular the EU had not decided who would be responsible for the certification process - though DJI believed it would be TUV, and so were working with them on that basis.
so obviously the EU is behind thier plans, they were hoping this transition year, would see C rated drones released...
I guess the pandemic has not helped, energies focused elsewhere
but the question now is, will they extend the transition phase? I personally doubt they'll extend it, unless the 2022 still shows no C drones - which I guess is possible!?
we are also left with how much DJI are to really want to spend resources on retro classification... I fear not much.
which C rating would the DJI FPV get?
probably they'd aim for C2, but this will require them to add a 'low-speed mode', but I guess they could potentially just rename N mode to this ?!
though, its hard to say its design is 'minimised risk of injury to people' esp. given its hard props.
I suspect if it failed C2 requirements, they would re-design it, and bring out a v2 that would allow it to be C2.
Id assume DJI will aim to make all their consumer drones C0-C2 - simply to maximise potential market.
that said, I think DJI could add remote id fairly simply, so perhaps they could go to C3 - they may have to do this for other countries anyway.
(unclear if they could retro fit this)
the other side to this is DJI is working in most countries, so it knows what rules are coming in (e.g. in US) or likely , so presumably are planning for these too.
this is why the sub 250g market is seen as critical, and also why many think DJI are releasing 'spare parts drone' (minor revisions) to clear inventory for newer drones)
so its all still 'up in the air' (sic) , unfortunately - we know DJI love to release new product versions, so I suspect, they won't bother with retro-classification.
rather they will just use this as useful marketing for a new version of each drone - basically, upgrade your drone if you want to fly in less restrictive areas.
but yeah, I fear drones like the DJI FPV and Air 2s will not come out of this well if you are in an urban area