Yesterday, after driving 2 hours to visit a new destination, I found myself sitting on the shore of a scenic lake. The wind was gusty and I was a little hesitant to fly, so I took out my new anemometer and found the wind gusts only reaching 14 to 18 mph. Less than I had estimated!
I flew for an hour with several "strong wind" warnings, but only one instance where the drone couldn't maintain its (hovering) position. At that point I descended and flew back - and waited until the wind died down a bit. I know the wind is usually stronger at altitude and that's where the drone is. I was at 200ft when I met the overpowering gusts...
My point is, having the anemometer gave me a factual wind speed - albeit at ground level - that was more reliable than my own, somewhat nervous, estimation. I'm glad I got it. It gave the confidence to fly - with caution.
Happy flying.
I flew for an hour with several "strong wind" warnings, but only one instance where the drone couldn't maintain its (hovering) position. At that point I descended and flew back - and waited until the wind died down a bit. I know the wind is usually stronger at altitude and that's where the drone is. I was at 200ft when I met the overpowering gusts...
My point is, having the anemometer gave me a factual wind speed - albeit at ground level - that was more reliable than my own, somewhat nervous, estimation. I'm glad I got it. It gave the confidence to fly - with caution.
Happy flying.