Let's compare
Tornado H920
Yuneec
Not yet assessed
- Height
- —
- Payload
- —
- Verified autonomy
- not assessed
- Real deployment
- not assessed
- Status
- —
- Price
- —
Tornado H920
YuneecThe Yuneec Tornado H920 is a professional hexacopter manufactured by Yuneec International (founded 1999, Hong Kong), originally announced in September 2015 with a Plus variant revealed in February 2017. It features a carbon fiber frame, retractable landing gear, 5-motor redundancy, interchangeable payloads (including CGO4 and Panasonic GH4 compatibility), and a ST24/ST16+ ground station with 7-inch touchscreen. The drone supports autonomous flight modes including waypoint programming, Follow Me/Watch Me, Curve Cable Cam, orbit mode, and Return-to-Home, with a flight time of approximately 24 minutes and a control range of up to 2 km. Community feedback notes it is large and slow to deploy compared to more compact competitors like the DJI Mavic 2 Pro.
Availability
Specification
- takeoff weight
- 4990 g (176.0 oz) with GB603, GH4 camera, and battery
- control range
- Up to 2 km (optimum conditions); one commerce source cites 1.6 km max range
- max speed
- 40 km/h
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Yuneec deep report
Yuneec's Android-based ST16 controller suffers from bricking issues, undermining the reliability of the professional platform.
An independent Reddit community post [14] documents a specific ST16 bricking incident with technical detail, corroborating broader community complaints about controller reliability [13].
from Yuneec deep report →Yuneec drones suffer from poor parts availability, difficult repairability, and unresponsive customer service — including at least one documented refusal of a refund after 2+ months.
Independent community reviewers [13][16] and a documented customer complaint [3] consistently report parts scarcity, repairability barriers, and poor after-sales support, independent of vendor PR.
from Yuneec deep report →Intel invested $60 million in Yuneec in 2015, representing a material strategic endorsement of the platform.
TechCrunch independently confirmed the $60M Intel investment [8], though the dossier contains no evidence that this translated into specific technology integration milestones or sustained commercial outcomes.
from Yuneec deep report →
Yuneec's H520 hexacopter platform supports interchangeable payloads including high-resolution, thermal (CGOET with dual 750-lumen spotlight), multispectral cameras, and a 30x optical zoom (E30Z), enabling multi-mission capability.
Payload specifications are confirmed across official and commerce sources [1][7][9] but lack independent third-party lab or field validation of the claimed optical and thermal performance figures.
from Yuneec deep report →Yuneec drones are deployed in real-world professional operations, including use by Aspire Defence for surveying on UK Ministry of Defence bases despite a broader Chinese drone ban.
This deployment is reported by a single community source [15] with no corroborating independent news report, official contract disclosure, or customer statement to confirm scale or ongoing status.
from Yuneec deep report →
Yuneec claims its drones transfer no data to external servers, positioning the platform as a data-secure alternative to DJI for sensitive government and enterprise missions.
This is an official-only claim [2] with no independent security audit, penetration test, or regulatory certification cited in the dossier to substantiate it.
from Yuneec deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.