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DJI Opens Up the Aerial LiDAR Market: The Zenmuse L1 Starts Reaching Surveying Firms

By: Isradrone Editorial Team⏱️ 3 min read
DJI פותחת את שוק ה-LiDAR האווירי: ה-Zenmuse L1 מתחיל להגיע לחברות מדידה

The Zenmuse L1, DJI's first LiDAR payload, began shipping to customers in the architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) sector in early 2021, following its announcement in late 2020. The payload combines a Livox LiDAR module, a high-precision IMU unit and a 1-inch CMOS camera with 20 megapixels, and comes at a price point far more accessible than the dedicated systems that have dominated the market until now.

One payload, three sensors, and 1.5 million points per flight

The L1 isn't trying to compete with standard cameras. It's built around a simple principle: combine a LiDAR sensor, a precise inertial measurement unit and a high-quality camera on a single stable gimbal, so that every measured point is accurately tied to the exact place and time it was captured. The result is a true-color 3D point cloud built in real time during the flight itself, rather than only in post-processing.

  • Scan rate: up to 240,000 points per second
  • Detection range: up to 450 meters
  • Area coverage: up to 2 square kilometers per single flight
  • Camera: 1-inch CMOS, 20 megapixels, with mechanical shutter
  • Gimbal: three-axis stabilization
  • Carrier platform: Matrice 300 RTK

What's the major photogrammetry drawback that LiDAR solves?

Surveyors working with standard photogrammetric imaging know the problem well: trees. The measurement method, which relies on overlapping images, struggles badly to penetrate vegetation, and in forested areas it simply can't see the true ground surface beneath the leaf canopy. The L1's laser beams work differently. They pass through small gaps between leaves and branches, returning reflections from multiple depths, including from the ground itself. This makes it possible to produce an accurate topographic model even in dense forests, a capability that until now was mostly reserved for expensive dedicated LiDAR systems.

Is DJI threatening a market once reserved for specialists?

Until now, anyone needing aerial LiDAR surveying had to turn to specialized manufacturers focused on a narrow, profitable niche, with systems priced for large-budget projects only. DJI is changing the equation by pairing the L1 with its existing flight platform, the Matrice 300 RTK, a drone many surveying companies already know and own. Instead of investing in an entirely dedicated system, a mid-sized surveying firm can now simply upgrade equipment it already has.

The open question is how accurate the L1 actually is compared to the expensive systems it's aiming to replace, and how it holds up in challenging field conditions such as strong wind or areas with very dense vegetation. Surveying companies that have purchased the equipment in recent weeks are only beginning to test the results on real projects, and it's still too early to say whether the gap with dedicated systems has fully closed or merely narrowed.

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Isradrone Editorial Team

The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.

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