DJI has announced the DJI Robomaster S1 radio controlled robot — and it has killer wheels that could make it an awesome tool for both 360 and traditional cameras.
The DJI Robomaster S1 is a radio controlled robot. Unlike DJI drones, it was designed not for videos but as an educational toy. Nonetheless, its unique wheels could make it very useful for videographers.
The DJI Robomaster S1 is modular and programmable with Scratch 3.0 or Python. It also has features such as following visual markers, or following claps. The turret acts as a stabilized gimbal and has both a 1/4-inch 1080p camera and a cannon that fires soft pellets or infrared light that can be detected by other S1 robots.
The killer feature of the S1 however, is its omnidirectional mecanum wheels. It can move in any direction — forward, backward, sideways, diagonally — at any time, as if it were hovering. Here is a review by Peter Sripol:
How Robomaster S1 could be useful for videographers
The S1’s omnidirectional wheels could make it particularly well suited as a radio controlled dolly. For example, besides a dolly in or dolly out movement, it could be useful for circular parallax shots.
The Robomaster wouldn’t be the first omnidirectional dolly — you may recall the Guru 360 Rover, which uses mecanum wheels to move omnidirectionally. It does work amazingly well as a dolly (I got to try it out myself at VRLA). However, the Guru 360 Rover costs $6,499. The Robomaster S1 on the other hand, is available for $499.
Obviously the S1 wouldn’t be able to carry heavy professional 360 cameras but it could be just right for GoPros or other action cameras or consumer 360 cameras such as the Insta360 One X (reviewed here) or GoPro Fusion (reviewed here).
The turret is also not that wide, so it wouldn’t be too prominent in the nadir of a 360 video. Moreover, the Robomaster S1 is modular, so I’m sure 3rd parties will create 3D printed camera mounts for it eventually.
Besides its size and motor, the S1’s other limitation however, would be that it can only operate indoors, on relatively smooth surfaces. We also don’t know yet how difficult it will be to program it for camera movements, although the website says it can follow blue painters’ tape on the ground.
It is now available for $499 from DJI.com. If you’re intrigued by a dolly with mecanum wheels but don’t want to spend $499, check out this RC car with mecanum wheels or this other one. I did order the Robomaster S1 and will be reviewing its potential as a dolly.
I JUST watched iPhonedo’s video on this thing. Crazy stuff. All the different directions it can move or drift in any orientation is wild.
Yes I haven’t tried the Robomaster myself, but I’ve tried the Guru 360 Rover and the omnidirectional movement is really cool, and I think it makes the S1 great for use as a dolly!
Have you tried the RC cars you mentioned?
The problem with these type of RC cars is that they can go pretty fast very quickly and typically you cannot set them to a constant very low speed.
The S1 will be better suited, since you can program it. How much does it weigh however? It looks very light and unfortunately I cannot see any product specs from my location.
Does anyone know when the S1 will be available in Europe?
Hi Sascha. I haven’t tried the RC cars yet. I ordered one though to try it out. I’m afraid you may be right – the RC cars might have only one speed. We’ll see.
S1 weighs 3.3 kg. Dimensions are 320×240×270 mm (length × width × height)
nice to see dji expanding into more robotics areas
I think it’s good but I hope they don’t drive everyone else away. DJI is too expensive. They need stronger competition. 🙂