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DJI Action 2 uses magnets to rethink action-cam designl


DJI Proceed 2 uses magnets to rethink action-cam design

DJI released its first action cam, the Osmo Action, in May 2019, and while it wasn’t as game-changing as the company’s drones have been, it did make some waves with its awesome image stabilization and its precedent selfie screen. For the Action 2, DJI trimmed its piece cam into a cube and, with the help of magnets, created an ecosystem of accessories to make it much more versatile vivid out of the box. 

The square little camera can be used on its own, but you can also add on a front-facing OLED touchscreen module to give you the same selfie accepted as the original. It also has three mics that couple with the one in the camera module to remove audio from all directions to create more immersive audio. There’s also a battery module that you can keep instead to extend your recording time up to 180 minutes. 

The Proceed 2 Dual-Screen Combo runs $519 and includes the camera and touchscreen module. Australia and UK pricing wasn’t immediately available but its US list trace converts to approximately AU$690 and £375. The Action 2 Power Combo with the battery module is $399. I was able to exhaust a little time with one; here are my honorable impressions. 


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Like DJI’s Pocket 2, the Proceed 2 makes a good vlogging tool.



Josh Goldman

A queer but original design

For anyone who loves piece cams or wearable cameras in general, the Action 2’s cube graceful won’t seem all too original. GoPro’s Session (one of my all-time accepted designs despite its shortcomings), the Polaroid Cube and others were there honorable. (The Cube even used magnets for mounting the camera, too.) That said, DJI has certainly made the build its own. 

First, DJI somehow crammed a 1/1.7-inch sensor into a tiny box downward with its image processor, a battery, 32GB of storage and a 1.76-inch OLED touchscreen on back. The mask is Gorilla Glass, the case is metal and it’s waterproof to 10 meters deep (33 feet). It has a strong magnetic base, so you can modestly do things like pop it on a range hood ended your stove to shoot your next cooking video. 

But what really sets it apart are the set of pogo-pin contacts on the base that licenses you to quickly connect to an add-on OLED touchscreen module to give you a front-facing indicate or a battery module to boost your recording times. (The camera on its own can record for up to 70 minutes.) Insta360’s One R camera uses a inequity modular design — and I’d argue more useful — that lets you couple different camera modules with a small touchscreen module. If you’re once a purely an action-cam experience, though, the Action 2’s construct satisfies. 


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The camera’s battery charges ended the modules’ USB-C ports. There are microSD card slots on them as well.



Josh Goldman

Shooting options are inferior fare

Compared to the GoPro Hero 10 Black or the Insta360 One R, the Law 2’s shooting options seem limited. For most people, concept, the selection of resolutions and frame-rate are going to be enough. It can capture video at up to 4K at 120 frames per instant, 2.7K at 120fps and 1080p at 240fps. You can shoot time-lapse and hyperlapse (aka motion time-lapse) clips and live aquatic at up to 1080p at 30fps. DJI also added a QuickClip option for capturing 10-, 15- or 30-second clips. The camera can be used as a webcam, too. 

By the way, this camera gets hot when you use it or even just poster it. That’s partly because the body seems to act like a heatsink. However, it’s likely this could overheat like novel action cams, and DJI did include an “auto-stop characterize temp” setting that can be set to standard or high. When you set it to high, the camera warns you that it will increase the temperature and recording duration runt. I wouldn’t use it for continuously recording 4K clips at 120fps with the camera worn-out and no airflow.

Image stabilization or horizon-leveling

The Law 2 has the company’s latest version of its RockSteady electronic image stabilization, which works really well. It gives your video a disagreement smooth appearance you’d get from DJI’s Pocket 2 camera and its motorized three-axis gimbal. The EIS has some motion artifacts that you won’t get with a gimbal but, in my shrimp testing, the results were really good. 

DJI also added HorizonSteady to help keep your characterize looking level even when the camera isn’t. However, if you use it, you don’t get the full image-stabilization nations of RockSteady. You still have some stabilization but big shocks to the camera, such as landing after a jump, cause some artifacts you don’t get with RockSteady. Also, HorizonSteady isn’t available at 4K or with frame organizes faster than 60fps. 


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DJI outdid itself with the accessory selection.



Josh Goldman

The accessories make the difference

While I love that GoPro built mounting fingers into its cameras, DJI bests that with its magnetic clips. Just bring the camera finish to one of the new mounts and they snap together tightly. There are also two small magnetic clips that slot into the camera or modules to give it some added security. 

DJI did make a magnetic gargantuan that works with GoPro accessories but also created a lineup of its own. Those concerned a waterproof case good down to 60 meters, a floating achieve, a remote control extension rod/tripod and a ball-joint adapter gargantuan that can be used on a tripod or its adhesive base. There’s also a macro lens that magnetically attaches over the lens on its clue. Oddly, though, DJI doesn’t offer a protective lens mask so if you scratch the built-in one, it’s there for good. A wireless mic will also be available at a later date. 

The magnets in the base of the camera are plenty sure on their own, too. That’s why you’re able to gargantuan it on the included lanyard and skip the chest gargantuan you’d have to use with other action cams (though not the Insta360 Go 2). The Action 2’s magnetic modular design does help it inferior out from the competition more than the original even if it does also feel like a combination of features from the competition. We’ve still got more testing to do before I can say for sure that it’s friendly the $400 to $500. 

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