Let's compare
Matrice 30 Enterprise
DJI
Not yet assessed
- Height
- —
- Payload
- —
- Verified autonomy
- not assessed
- Real deployment
- not assessed
- Status
- —
- Price
- —
Matrice 30 Enterprise
DJIThe DJI Matrice 30 Series (M30/M30T) is a compact, enterprise-grade quadcopter drone released in March 2022, featuring a multi-sensor payload (48MP zoom, 12MP wide, 1200m laser rangefinder, and on the M30T a 640×512 radiometric thermal camera), IP55 weather resistance, and up to 41 minutes of flight time. It is designed for professional applications including public safety, inspection, search and rescue, and integrates with DJI Dock and FlightHub 2 for remote/automated operations. The drone executes pre-planned missions autonomously but operates under active human oversight via the RC Plus controller or FlightHub 2 platform, with a human pilot monitoring and able to intervene at any time. Several facts in the extracted dataset pertain to other DJI products (Matrice 100, 300 RTK, Matrice 4 series, Dock 3) rather than the M30 specifically, limiting some conclusions.
Availability
Specification
- camera_payload_m30
- 48MP zoom camera (16x optical, 200x hybrid), 12MP wide-angle camera, 1200m laser rangefinder
- camera_payload_m30t_addition
- 640×512 radiometric thermal camera (additional to M30 sensors)
- battery
- TB30 Intelligent Flight Battery; $473 each; 400 charge cycles; hot-swappable
- battery_station
- BS30 Intelligent Battery Station; $1,397
- takeoff_weight
- 4069g
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the DJI deep report
DJI holds 70–80% of the global civil drone market and approximately 96% of the U.S. market (pre-FCC restrictions).
Multiple independent analyses and research sources [10][13][16] corroborate DJI's dominant market position, though the 96% U.S. figure is pre-restriction and current share post-FCC action is unverified.
from DJI deep report →The DJI Robomaster S1 supports full onboard autonomy via a ROS2-based stack, including zero-shot sim-to-real multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) policy transfer.
An independent academic paper from the University of Cambridge [21] confirms the Robomaster S1 was used as a customized research platform running a ROS2-based full onboard autonomy stack with successful sim-to-real MARL transfer, though this reflects research-lab capability, not a commercial product claim.
from DJI deep report →
DJI claims the Lito X1 and Lito 1 feature omnidirectional obstacle sensing active down to 5 lux, and the Matrice 400 features power-line-level obstacle sensing.
Specs are sourced from DJI's own press releases [12] and official enterprise blog [7]; no independent third-party lab test or field validation of the 5-lux omnidirectional sensing or power-line detection performance has been identified in the dossier.
from DJI deep report →The DJI FlyCart 100 is a commercially deployed all-in-one intelligent drone delivery system.
The FlyCart 100 is listed on DJI's official website [1] as a product, but the dossier contains no independent evidence of commercial-scale deployment, customer outcomes, or regulatory approval for delivery operations in any jurisdiction.
from DJI deep report →
DJI's Return-to-Home (RTH) and autonomous safety features are reliable across its consumer drone lineup.
Multiple independent community reports [30][31][33][35] document RTH failures, remote controller transmission failures at low altitude, and tracking failures in forested environments, directly contradicting vendor marketing of reliable autonomous safety features.
from DJI deep report →DJI has deployed 600,000+ agricultural drones across 100+ countries, saving 410 million tons of water and cutting 51 million tons of CO2 emissions.
These figures originate exclusively from a DJI Agriculture press release [11]; no independent verification of the deployment count, water savings, or emissions reduction figures is present in the dossier.
from DJI deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.
