In 2020, shortly after DJI's civilian drone DJI Mavic Air 2 was released, Fomalhaut Techno Solutions, a Japanese technology lab that loves and specializes in disassembly, together with the Japanese publication Nikkei Asian Review, disassembled this new model of machine. They revealed that, except for the chips driving the rotor blades and paddles, which are proprietary to DJI, the chips responsible for the core battery, radio signal and noise cancellation are from Texas Instruments and Qorvo respectively, both of which are among the leading semiconductor giants in the US.
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