- Joined
- Mar 3, 2017
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- Age
- 70
If I remember correctly, possible, there was speculation that the vibrations sent out but the props etc. excite the drones or resemble the vibrations of a mating flight. Honey bee queens mate on the wing. Mating is fatal for the drone, his bits are torn out, ouch!So rather than an attack this was a mating call?
In my area I have hummingbirds to contend with. For some reason they like to check my drone out when I’m hovering and waiting for a home point. It’s like the drone is the mother of all hummingbirds.
Something you said at the beginning caught my eye? You are taking off before you have gps home point lock? Then hovering till you get it? Do you do this as a standard practice? Only once in hundreds of flights have I done this. And it was dictated by the tree cover. But the pages of the forum are full of people with strange and catastrophic events doing this, and should be avoided.In my area I have hummingbirds to contend with. For some reason they like to check my drone out when I’m hovering and waiting for a home point. It’s like the drone is the mother of all hummingbirds.
I haven’t had a beeencounter up to this point in my flying history, but, I wouldn’t rule out the possibility. I feel that both bees and hummingbirds are attracted by the frequency of the drone’s props when in flight. Drone prop rpm can vary from 10k to 30k depending on the type of drone…thus the high frequency / pitch.
Starting with the basics… all bees buzz when they fly. The buzzing sound we hear is because bees can flap their wings at a pretty impressive 230 beats per second. This rapid wing beat causes the air around the bee to vibrate and that vibration travels to our ear and we interpret that vibration as a buzzing sound.
Now, researchers reporting in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on October 22 have found that those vibrations carry important information about where their potential mates are from. The findings are the first to suggest that bees rely on vibrations, in addition to chemical signals, as a mode of mate recognition.
Maybe the beeswere checking you out as a potential mate
As for hummingbirds. The number of times a hummingbird's wings beat is different from one species to another, and ranges from 720 to 5400 times per minute when hovering.
My hummingbirds are the Ruby Throated variety that beat at 5.5k beats per minute. They stick to their feeders more now since they have become accustomed to the odd takeoff from home. I’m not sure if My drone was being sized up as a potential mate
I now have a pair of Ravens nesting in my back yard. It is now a NO FLY ZONE for time being.
Thanks for sharing yourvideo
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I do, every time the ground is in the GPS shadow of trees etc..Do you do this as a standard practice?
Hmmm? Maybe they're attracted to the sound of the drone, which sound like a bee swarm to some people. Let's all now make little bees.
Trackerputnum,Something you said at the beginning caught my eye? You are taking off before you have gps home point lock? Then hovering till you get it? Do you do this as a standard practice? Only once in hundreds of flights have I done this. And it was dictated by the tree cover. But the pages of the forum are full of people with strange and catastrophic events doing this, and should be avoided.
I rarely can fly without some bees flying around the drone, and it always first occurs at about 100 feet.
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