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DJI Agras T100 Battery & Drone Maintenance Guide 2026 | Vantage Drones
✦ Vantage Drones — May 2026

Keep It Flying:
The Essential Guide to
Drone Maintenance

LiPo batteries, DJI Agras T100 cold-weather care, and propeller maintenance — your complete seasonal guide to protecting your fleet in Canadian conditions.

Vantage Drones Editorial Team May 9, 2026 8 min read

Whether you're running a DJI Agras T100 across a Manitoba canola field or deploying a Matrice 400 for an infrastructure inspection in the Rockies, how you maintain your equipment determines how long it lasts — and whether it stays airborne when it matters most.

This guide covers the three pillars of drone fleet reliability: LiPo battery care, a focused look at the DJI Agras T100 DB2160 battery and why cold is its biggest threat, and a propeller maintenance schedule every Canadian operator should follow.

Part 1 — LiPo Battery Care

LiPo batteries are the most temperature-sensitive component on your drone. Canada's seasonal extremes — from -35°C prairie winters to +35°C summer days — create conditions these cells weren't designed to tolerate without careful management. The consequences range from shortened cycle life to mid-flight power failure.

Operating temperature zones

Never Fly Here
Below 0°C
Do not charge or fly. Warm battery to at least 15°C first.
Optimal
15–35°C
Full performance. Normal operations.
Monitor
35–40°C
Allow packs to cool between flights.
Ground Fleet
Above 45°C
Thermal runaway risk. Do not charge or fly.

LiPo battery operating temperature zones — DJI Agras T100 & Matrice 400

⚠ Never Charge a Cold Battery

Charging below 0°C causes lithium plating — metallic lithium deposits on the anode instead of absorbing into graphite. This is irreversible, causes immediate capacity loss, and raises the risk of internal short-circuit or fire. The DJI BMS will slow the charge rate as a safeguard, but it is not a substitute for proper warm-up.

What kills battery capacity fastest

1Deep DischargeBelow 10% per flight
2Full-Charge StorageStored at 100% for weeks
3Fast Charge OnlyAlways at max rate
4No Cycle LogNot tracking charge cycles
Correct Storage40–65% charge, 10–25°C indoors

Steps 1–4 reduce cycle life significantly — step 5 is the goal

Charging best practices

  • Use only DJI-approved chargers — third-party chargers skip cell balancing protocols
  • Allow hot packs to rest at least 30 minutes post-flight before charging
  • Never charge unattended overnight — use a LiPo-safe bag or fireproof container
  • Set storage mode (40–65%) for any pack not flying within 10 days
  • Retire any swollen pack immediately — never fly a puffy battery
  • Dispose at an e-waste or LiPo recycling depot — not in household waste
  • Spotlight — DJI Agras T100 & the DB2160 Battery

    The DJI Agras T100 carries a 100 L spray tank to a max takeoff weight of 175 kg. Its power source — the DB2160 Intelligent Flight Battery — is a 41,000 mAh, 52 V, 14.7 kg pack that recharges in just 8–9 minutes. That performance comes with a firm requirement: always keep it warm.

    DB2160 key specifications

    SpecificationValueCold-Weather Implication
    Capacity / Voltage41,000 mAh / 52 VLarge cell volume — more at stake from temperature stress
    Weight14.7 kgDense pack — core temperature lags well behind surface temperature
    Rated Cycle LifeUp to 1,500 cyclesCold misuse can cut effective cycle life by 30–50%
    Aircraft Operating Temp0°C to 40°C0°C is a hard floor — not a "caution zone" to push against
    Charging Temperature5°C to 40°CFast charging only available when cell temp is above 15°C
    Recommended Storage10°C to 25°C indoorsClimate-controlled space year-round — no unheated outbuildings
    Cooling SystemTriple air-channelDesigned to dissipate heat post-flight — cannot warm cells in cold conditions

    Source: DJI Agras T100 official specifications — ag.dji.com/t100/specs

    Six ways cold damages the DB2160

    Cold temperatures are genuinely detrimental to this battery. The position is unambiguous: the DB2160 must not be exposed to freezing or near-freezing conditions before charging or flight.

    🧊
    Electrolyte Viscosity Rises

    Cold thickens the electrolyte, slowing ion transport and raising internal resistance — causing voltage sag mid-flight.

    Lithium Plating on Charge

    Below 0°C, lithium deposits as metal on the anode instead of absorbing into graphite — irreversible, and creates dendrites risking internal short-circuits.

    📉
    Immediate Capacity Loss

    A cold DB2160 at 0°C may deliver only 60–70% of rated capacity — enough to cause a forced landing during a full spray operation.

    🔥
    Thermal Runaway Risk

    Dendrites from cold charging are a leading cause of internal short circuits. On a 41,000 mAh pack, the resulting energy release is severe.

    🛡️
    BMS Offers Partial Protection

    The DB2160's BMS restricts fast charging below 15°C — but it does not eliminate cold-related damage. It is a safety net, not a solution.

    ⚖️
    Slow Core Warm-Up

    At 14.7 kg, the thermal mass is enormous. The surface may feel warm while the cell core is still critically cold — allow 60–90 minutes of indoor warm-up before charging or flying.

    Six cold-temperature damage mechanisms for the DJI DB2160 Intelligent Flight Battery

    ⚠ DJI Enterprise — Official Guidance

    DJI Enterprise's winter guidelines confirm that temperatures below 15°C increase internal resistance, reduce discharge capacity, and increase voltage drop. They recommend preheating batteries above 15°C before flight. The T100's 0°C operating floor means cold-morning starts require a structured warm-up protocol — not a shortcut.

    DB2160 cold-weather protocol

    • Never charge below 5°C — fast charging requires the cell temperature to be above 15°C. The battery itself, not just the ambient air, must be at temperature.
    • Allow 60–90 minutes of indoor warm-up if packs have been exposed to cold before charging or flying.
    • Perform a low-hover warm-up of 3–5 minutes at low throttle before full spray operations below 10°C.
    • Raise return-to-home threshold by 10% in cold conditions — cold packs trigger low-voltage warnings earlier than expected.
    • Store packs in climate-controlled indoor space year-round — 10–25°C, 40–65% charge. Never in an unheated barn, outbuilding, or vehicle overnight.
    • Inspect and capacity-test any pack used or charged below the recommended temperature floor before returning to service.
    ✓ The Cost Case

    A genuine DJI DB2160 retails at $1,800–$2,200 CAD and is rated for up to 1,500 cycles under proper care. Cold mismanagement can cut that in half — doubling your cost per flight hour. Proper indoor climate-controlled storage pays for itself in the first season.

    Part 2 — Propeller Maintenance

    Propellers are the most overlooked consumable in fleet management. Operators log battery cycles carefully and then fly the same propellers for an entire season. On an agricultural drone at full payload, a fatigued or damaged propeller means sudden lift loss, uncontrolled descent, and potential safety incidents.

    Four common failure modes

    🌀
    Hairline cracks

    Near the hub or mid-blade. Often invisible. Can cause blade separation at operating RPM.

    🪨
    Impact nicks

    From debris, crop stubble, or hard landings. Even small chips alter aerodynamic profile and cause vibration.

    🌡️
    UV degradation

    Composite blades exposed to years of sun become brittle. Discolouration and surface chalking are early warning signs.

    ⚖️
    Wear imbalance

    Uneven tip erosion creates asymmetric lift, vibration, and accelerated motor bearing wear.

    Inspection and replacement schedule

    TriggerWhat to CheckAction
    Before every flightVisual check for cracks, chips, secure lockReplace immediately if any damage found
    Every 50 flight hoursFull surface inspection under good lightingProactively replace if any wear present
    Every 100 flight hoursFull set regardless of visible conditionRetire and replace as a matched set
    After any hard landingAll blades for impact, flex, misalignmentReplace affected props even if damage looks minor
    After spray operationsChemical residue on blade surfaceWipe with damp cloth; inspect for surface etching
    Start of each seasonFull replacement on all working dronesRotate old props to training or demo use

    Propeller maintenance intervals — enterprise and agricultural drone operations

    ⚡ Always Replace in Matched Sets

    DJI Agras and Matrice drones use counter-rotating propeller pairs. Mixing old and new props creates imbalance that undermines attitude control. When one prop goes, replace the full set.

    ✓ Post-Spray Cleaning

    Wipe blades with a damp cloth and mild soap after each spray session — avoid acetone or harsh solvents. Allow props to dry fully before storage. Agrochemicals degrade composite materials over repeated exposure, so document the products used and adjust replacement intervals accordingly.

    Seasonal Maintenance Calendar

    Here's when to prioritise key maintenance tasks across the Canadian drone operating year.

    Battery tasks Propeller tasks

    Higher bars = more active maintenance required that month

    Pre-Season (March – April)
    • Full battery health check in DJI app
    • Replace all seasonal-use propellers
    • Retire any pack below 80% rated capacity
    • Calibrate chargers and inspect hub connectors
    Post-Season (October – November)
    • Set all packs to storage mode (40–65%)
    • Deep-clean airframe and props before storage
    • Move all batteries to climate-controlled indoor storage
    • Check and top up stored packs monthly

    A Well-Maintained Drone Is a Profitable Drone

    A replacement prop set or battery costs a fraction of what an unplanned crash or premature equipment failure costs in downtime, repairs, and lost operating days. Every warm-up protocol followed and every inspection completed on schedule directly protects your season.

    Vantage Drones stocks genuine DJI Agras T100 DB2160 batteries, matched propeller sets, LiPo storage accessories, and battery warmers. Contact our team to build a fleet maintenance program for your operation.

    Shop Batteries & Props at Vantage Drones →