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DJI Unveils the Zenmuse L2: A New Generation of Aerial LiDAR

By: Isradrone Editorial Team⏱️ 3 min read
DJI חושפת את ה-Zenmuse L2: דור חדש של LiDAR לסקר אווירי

DJI unveiled the Zenmuse L2 at the Intergeo conference in Berlin, a new LiDAR payload for aerial mapping that replaces the L1 model from 2021. Pricing starts at $13,560, and the device offers 5-centimeter horizontal accuracy, 4-centimeter vertical accuracy, and a point emission rate of up to 240,000 points per second.

Can DJI repeat the success of the payload that conquered the aerial survey market?

The original L1 quickly became a standard tool for survey companies, land surveyors, and infrastructure engineers looking for a cheaper alternative to expensive, cumbersome LiDAR solutions. Now DJI is trying to repeat that success with a model that promises greater accuracy, longer range, and denser data, without changing the product's basic philosophy: a single payload combining a LiDAR sensor, an in-house-developed inertial measurement unit (IMU), and an RGB mapping camera, all in one body that mounts on the Matrice 300 RTK and Matrice 350 RTK flight platforms.

In practice, the L2 doesn't represent a dramatic technological leap but rather a measured improvement in the parameters that matter most to field teams: detection range, point rate, and vegetation penetration. For survey companies in Israel already using the L1 on mining and infrastructure projects, this will mainly come down to return on investment: does the upgrade justify moving to a new payload priced above $13,000?

What technical specs give it an edge over photogrammetry?

The main advantage of LiDAR over camera-only mapping is its ability to penetrate partial vegetation cover and reach true ground data beneath trees and brush. DJI emphasizes that the L2 improves on this parameter compared to its predecessor:

  • Horizontal accuracy: 5 centimeters
  • Vertical accuracy: 4 centimeters
  • Maximum coverage area per single flight: 2.5 square kilometers
  • Maximum point emission rate: 240,000 points per second
  • Detection range improvement over the L1: 30 percent
  • Starting price: $13,560 USD

Two scanning modes for two types of missions

DJI built the L2 with two distinct scanning profiles, allowing the payload to be matched to the specific mission instead of settling for a one-size-fits-all solution:

  • Repetitive mode: more uniform and precise mapping, suited to standard ground surveys and geodesy
  • Non-repetitive mode: less uniformity but stronger vegetation penetration, suited to power-line corridor inspections and forestry surveys

Who actually needs this: mining, construction, and power lines?

DJI is clearly positioning the L2 for the mining, quarrying, construction, and linear infrastructure markets, especially power-line corridors where dense vegetation hides the terrain from standard cameras. In these industries, where a measurement error of just a few centimeters can snowball into far higher repair costs, LiDAR has already become an almost self-evident tool, and the L2 is DJI's attempt to cement its position as the default supplier in this market.

An open question remains around total cost of ownership: a payload priced above $13,000 also requires a compatible flight platform such as the Matrice 300 or 350, equipment that significantly raises the entry barrier for small and mid-sized survey companies still weighing whether to move from camera-only photogrammetry to a full LiDAR solution.

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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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