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Dragonfish Standard

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Dragonfish Standard

Autel Robotics

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

Dragonfish Standard

Autel Robotics
Unverified

The Autel Dragonfish Standard is a tilt-rotor VTOL fixed-wing hybrid drone manufactured by Autel Robotics, launched around 2022 and targeted at enterprise/public-safety missions including law enforcement, SAR, border patrol, and energy inspection. It offers up to 126 minutes of flight time with payload, a 30 km transmission range (with base station), 30 m/s max speed, RTK centimeter-level positioning, and supports multiple interchangeable payloads up to 1.5 kg. The platform performs its surveillance/inspection tasks autonomously via waypoint missions, AI tracking, and terrain avoidance, with no evidence of remote operators performing the task itself. The Dragonfish Lite variant has been discontinued (support ending December 2026), while the Standard remains active; pricing from commerce sources ranges from approximately $112,750–$116,300 depending on payload configuration.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

dimensions (folded/assembled)
1290 × 2300 × 460 mm (L×W×H)
weight (with 2 batteries, no gimbal)
7.5 kg
max takeoff weight
9 kg
max payload
1.5 kg
max flight time (with payload)
126 minutes
max flight speed
30 m/s (108 km/h)
cruise speed range
0–17 m/s (multi-rotor mode) / 17–30 m/s (fixed-wing mode)
transmission range
10 km (GCS standalone) / 30 km (with base station)
battery
1.3 kg per battery, 277.2 Wh; 120 min charge time
supported payloads
Z2, T3, T3H, L20T, M1 (camera gimbals, multispectral sensors, third-party payloads)
price (system with payload)
$112,750–$116,300 USD depending on payload configuration

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Autel Robotics deep report

Good
  • Autel Robotics holds approximately 7% of the US UAV market and grew following US government restrictions on DJI.

    Wikipedia (an independent secondary source) cites the ~7% US market share figure as of 2021 and links growth to DJI restrictions [14]; however, the figure is now several years old and no more recent independent market data is available in the dossier.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
  • Autel Robotics was listed on the US Department of Defense Chinese military enterprise list on January 6, 2025.

    Both Wikipedia [14] and Autel's own public statement [12] confirm the DoD listing as a factual event; Autel's denial of military ties is self-serving and does not alter the independently documented designation.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
  • The EVO Max 4T and Autel Alpha are actively sold commercial products with confirmed retail pricing, representing Autel's fully commercial enterprise tier.

    Autel Alpha is listed at $19,289 on both the official Autel shop and third-party retailer DroneNerds [5][9]; EVO Max 4N is listed at $8,899–$12,599 across Dronefly and DroneNerds [7][9] — independent retail listings confirm active commercial availability, though real-world deployment scale and customer outcomes remain unverified.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • The Autel Alpha achieves personnel recognition at ranges up to 8 km.

    The 8 km personnel recognition figure appears only on Autel's official product page and a commerce listing (DroneNerds) [3][9] — both are vendor-aligned sources; no independent field test or third-party evaluation confirms this operational range.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
  • The Autel Alpha is IP55-rated, operates from -4°F to 122°F, and carries a laser rangefinder accurate to ±1m within 400m — positioning it as a ruggedized enterprise platform.

    Hardware specs are corroborated by both the official product page and a third-party retailer listing (DroneNerds) [3][9], lending moderate confidence, but no independent environmental or accuracy testing has verified these specifications in the field.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
Ugly
  • Autel drones are a viable, production-ready alternative to DJI for professional UAV mapping and photogrammetry workflows.

    Multiple independent Reddit communities focused on UAV mapping explicitly report photogrammetry surface quality issues, inconsistent support, and a clear preference for DJI over Autel for reliability in professional workflows [16][20][17] — Autel is described as a fallback, not an equal.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →
  • Several Autel product lines (EVO I, EVO III, EVO Nest 2, Apex, EVO Nano, EVO Lite) have been discontinued, raising concerns about long-term parts availability and support continuity.

    Autel's own newsroom confirms the end-of-life status of these lines [11], and independent community users separately report difficulty obtaining spare parts and inconsistent support [15][18][19] — together these corroborate the concern, contradicting any implicit vendor claim of robust long-term support.

    from Autel Robotics deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.