I tested the affordable Ruko U11Mini 4K drone — and it's no match for DJI's new flyer
by https://www.techradar.com/uk/author/sam-kieldsen · TechRadarTechRadar Verdict
The Ruko U11Mini 4K isn't a disaster, but it's hard to recommend in a world where the DJI Lito 1 exists. A worrying mid-flight voltage drop, wind performance that falls short of Ruko's own claims, imprecise joysticks and a baffling lack of USB connectivity all add up to a drone that just feels if not unfinished then certainly unpolished. The camera, meanwhile, produces passable 4K video but struggles badly with stills. The RC3 touchscreen controller is a highlight, but not enough to tip the balance.
Pros
- +Light and folds to a pocketable size
- +4K video is watchable when captured in good light
Cons
- -Joystick dead zone makes smooth camera moves a struggle
- -Camera routinely overexposes
- -No obstacle avoidance of any kind
- -No USB port makes accessing internal storage tricky
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- How I tested
Ruko U11Mini 4K: One-minute review
DJI's dominance of the consumer drone market is so total that you have to wonder whether any rival can land a meaningful blow. The Ruko U11Mini 4K is the latest contender to step into the ring, and on paper it looks like a credible one: a sub-250g folding quadcopter with a 1/2-inch CMOS sensor, 4K video, and an optional touchscreen controller that's clearly modeled on DJI's own RC series.
Unfortunately, the closer I looked, the more the U11Mini 4K's limitations revealed themselves, and the gulf between Ruko and DJI's similarly-priced beginner drones remains huge.
In the air, the U11Mini 4K is a mixed bag. Flight is reasonably stable in calm conditions, but it's easily pushed around by wind, and during one flight I experienced an alarming voltage drop that triggered an unscheduled emergency landing. The touchscreen RC3 controller is a solid piece of hardware, and a smart way to sidestep the usual phone-pairing headaches, but its joysticks lack the precision of DJI's equivalents, making smooth, cinematic camera moves a struggle.
There's no obstacle avoidance whatsoever, and the automated flight modes feel half-baked: Point of Interest mode, for instance, simply circles wherever the drone happens to be, rather than the subject you actually want to showcase.
The camera quality is similarly inconsistent. 4K video in good light is detailed and perfectly watchable, if a little flat and lacking in dynamic range, but stills are a different story; the U11Mini 4K's exposure metering routinely blows out highlights, and there's no way to fix this reliably even when dialing back the EV.
Storage is another sore point: the drone does have a small but usable amount of internal storage, but with no USB port on the aircraft itself, getting your footage off it is a major chore, and I'd recommend sticking exclusively to a microSD card instead. One that you'll have to supply yourself, as none are included in the box.
All of this would be more forgivable if the U11Mini 4K were a budget bargain, but at around £300 (rising to £499 for the bundle I tested, with its two batteries, hard case and that RC3 controller), it's pitched at almost exactly the same price as the DJI Lito 1 — a drone that beats it comprehensively on image quality, obstacle sensing and battery life. The U11Mini 4K isn't a complete disaster, but nobody should pick one over DJI's equivalent.
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