The DJI Spark is the smallest, cheapest obstacle-avoiding drone yet


If I’ve learned one thing from reviewing drones, it’s this: You, dear reader, either love ‘em or hate ‘em.

Some people are horrified that drone sales more than doubled last year, that they’re expected to increase 10X in the next five years, that the skies will soon fill up with noisy, dangerous spying machines.

Other people are exhilarated by the prospect of breaking free from our flat, two-dimensional existence. They love that they can come breathtakingly close to having jetpacks, going where they want, looking where they want. No wonder drones are revolutionizing filmmaking, engineering, farming, law enforcement, search and rescue, real estate, and on and on.

Both kinds of readers should be interested in this month’s drone news, then: The arrival of the smallest, least expensive smart drone ever made.

The Drone Spark’s body is smaller than your phone.
The Drone Spark’s body is smaller than your phone.

It’s the DJI Spark. At $500, it’s not the impulse buy for the masses that DJI seems to think it is (“great for spontaneous selfies!”). But it does bring smart, high-quality drones within reach of many more people. Which means more student filmmakers doing professional work, more real-estate offices shooting fly-throughs of homes, more gorgeously produced marching-band videos.

And more drones in the sky. Sorry about that, drone haters.

The size

The price of the Spark is a big deal—but the size of the Spark is an even bigger (smaller?) deal. It’s tiny.

Videos and photos don’t even capture it. The body of this thing is the size of your phone, or a soda can.

A size comparison. Caution: Do not drink.
A size comparison. Caution: Do not drink.

The Spark’s shape resembles its big brother, the $1,000 Mavic Pro, which DJI released only eight months ago (here’s my review), and offers many of the same advantages. But the Spark is a mini-me Mavic, only 5.5 inches square, including the propellers; the Mavic is twice as big. (Then again, the Mavic’s struts and propellers fold down against the body, and the Spark’s don’t.)

Small is huge. Small means you can carry your drone with you more often, to more places. Small means you can capture video from inside smaller spaces. Small means less intimidating to whoever you’re filming, and less suspicious to authority figures. (Of course, you should always fly only where it’s legal. Here are the rules.)

The Spark is stable enough to fly indoors, although the optional propeller guards are a good idea.
The Spark is stable enough to fly indoors, although the optional propeller guards are a good idea.

How to fly

You can control the Spark in any of three ways.

First, you can use the optional remote control ($150, not available yet). (The remote also comes in the $700 “Fly More” kit, which includes the Spark, the remote, two batteries, four spare propellers, propeller guards for indoor flight, a fantastic three-battery charger, a shoulder bag, and all necessary cables. The $500 basic kit includes only the drone, two spare propellers, and one battery. You charge the drone by connecting it to a micro-USB cable, much as you would a phone.)