You got skillsJust replaced part 17 a couple days ago. You have to go deep. I will do a write up on the steps to disassemble the bird soon. View attachment 21128View attachment 21129View attachment 21130View attachment 21131
Well, I did the new update to 1.02.0.300 and to get the battery update, and the release button broke. Center pin remains down which is the left side latch. Just great! Four months out of so pay to fix it I guess.
Anyone do a write up as to the replacement procedure? Part is $100 (Part 17). Can't tell from photos if it also has the button unit as part of it?
Well, I did the new update to 1.02.0.300 and to get the battery update, and the release button broke. Center pin remains down which is the left side latch. Just great! Four months out of so pay to fix it I guess.
Anyone do a write up as to the replacement procedure? Part is $100 (Part 17). Can't tell from photos if it also has the button unit as part of it?
This happened to me a few months back a member on the forum here dougcjohn helped me with the instructions below... if you need any help or have any questions feel free to PM me and I will give you my phone number. feel free to call me.
- Note the screws, there are some screws the same size with different head shapes (thicker & thinner).
- I used a nice sized magnet screw tray to allow me to keep the screw groups separate.
- Removing TOP fuselage, need to unhook 3 small connectors (2 on 1 side, 1 on the other) connecting to Rt & Lf sides on the small main board attached to the ft of battery center section. They are under 2 small pieces of shroud trim (Lf & Rt) that simply lift off to release shroud tabs. Top Fuselage will lift off with a slight forward and back movement.
- Under Nose Cone, Removing 4 antenna connectors, take note of positions on nose electronics. I snap a quick photo for reference as needed.
- When disamb of Upper & Lower section, take note of 2 hidden screws under top center trim before you attempt to push halves apart.
- When separating Top & Bottom sections, take note of wire routing under belly shroud and note which wire is on top, helps when going back together and not pinch wires. I didn’t the first time and took a bit to get it to nicely fit under shroud properly. These wires run to sm main board attached to Ft battery section.
- 5B) When pushing the Upper & Lower section apart, it comes apart without a lot of downward pressure. If it won’t move, recheck for screws or connectors remaining holding the two halves together.
Also I had a very hard time getting the gold antenna connectors off the electronics section, after some very nerve racking attempts , I sprayed some deoxit gold on the connecters and successfully pulled them off with needle nose pliers.
- When to the stage of removing the small main board off the ft of the battery center section. You’ll notice the 2 large battery terminals on the board with yellow terminal sealant coming from behind the main board. These are extremely hard to remove without risk of damaging the board, these large gauge wires run to the battery center section. You can cut these wires just behind the main board terminals to allow you to finish removing the main board and then when in hand, gently cut the sealant off and remove the terminal stubs. You new Battery Center Section will have new wire terminals to push on these open terminals.
- Take note of the large gauge battery wires under the main terminal plate, routing and placement to avoid pinching.
Another helpful source is a YouTube on Gimbal repair that explains the majority of the complex steps, but you’ll need to slow the YouTube down several factors because they speed it up so fast you can’t see the little steps. The YouTube is going after the ft gimbal part, but it gets you past the tricky parts and just leaves the clear steps to reach the battery section. Slowing it down shows the steps I personally think they were attempting to hide so you wouldn’t perform yourself.
On YouTube: go to the “setting” icon on bottom right, select Playback speed and slow it down so you can watch the procedure.
Watch up to 1:20 seconds into video… the rest doesn’t apply to the battery center section. Leave the Nose electronics in place, wasted steps for Battery Section. After you get the top half section to separate, the remaining steps aren’t bad to get the battery center section removed.
Oh, BTW the part 17 does come with everything you need including the buttons, (its a pretty significant piece) , unless you have to replace the battery board. The wire glue......yikes.. painful memories. had me shook for a bit. once I had the glue removed and could freely turn the connectors, I mangled the top of those gold connections so bad I was sure I was going to need a new battery board, you'll see what I mean! but got it without replacing it.I wasn't sure if it was a 500$ or 50$ part, never can tell with DJIbut I wasn't very expensive if you do need to replace it, I think 60$.
man I love deoxit, bailed me out of a few binds with corroded electrical connectors , I originally purchased it for my P2 batteries and connectors , but seems like I use it weekly for something or other...
I don't remember off the top of my head what TORX sizes it required. I didn't run into any issues with the compass. this job was a weird combination between a car and iPhone motherboard repairif you run into a bind feel free to give me a call.
yikes, stripped broken screws are the worst. wish you the best on your surgery. I know it was quite nerve racking in my case. hopefully you have better luck on the antenna wires than i did.
I just replaced the gimbal dampers a couple weeks before i did the battery compartment, i just stretched it without entirely removing. those were kind of funky to put the new set in, my i2 came with an extra set, did you replace them yet?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.