Dan'sUavTech
Well-Known Member
Sound awesome!On the slopes they love to compete with you and the faster you flew the more it got their attention and they would do the same. It was fantastic. Thermal flying as well Awesome fun.
Sound awesome!On the slopes they love to compete with you and the faster you flew the more it got their attention and they would do the same. It was fantastic. Thermal flying as well Awesome fun.
What a load of tosh!Here’s from information from a site online.
Visual and auditory deterrents can be an effective way to keep birds away from your drone. Here are some innovative solutions:
Reflective Materials: Attach reflective materials, such as aluminum foil or reflective tape, to your drone’s body. The reflective surfaces can create a flashing effect, startling birds and keeping them at bay.
Drone design and modifications can also play a crucial role in deterring birds. Here are some ideas:
- Colorful Decals: Apply bright, contrasting decals to your drone’s body. Birds are less likely to approach a drone with striking colors, as they perceive it as a potential threat.
- Noise-Making Devices: Install noise-making devices, such as loudspeakers or sirens, on your drone. The sudden, loud noise can scare birds away.
- Streamlined Design: Opt for a streamlined drone design with minimal protrusions, making it less appealing to birds.
- Bird-Repellent Coatings: Apply bird-repellent coatings or paints to your drone’s body. These coatings often contain capsaicin, the active ingredient in chili peppers, which deters birds.
- Modified Propellers: Use propellers with serrated edges or irregular shapes, making them less appealing to birds.
I think I’d be too nervous to try aluminum foil.
Here’s from information from a site online.
Visual and auditory deterrents can be an effective way to keep birds away from your drone. Here are some innovative solutions:
Reflective Materials: Attach reflective materials, such as aluminum foil or reflective tape, to your drone’s body. The reflective surfaces can create a flashing effect, startling birds and keeping them at bay.
Drone design and modifications can also play a crucial role in deterring birds. Here are some ideas:
- Colorful Decals: Apply bright, contrasting decals to your drone’s body. Birds are less likely to approach a drone with striking colors, as they perceive it as a potential threat.
- Noise-Making Devices: Install noise-making devices, such as loudspeakers or sirens, on your drone. The sudden, loud noise can scare birds away.
- Streamlined Design: Opt for a streamlined drone design with minimal protrusions, making it less appealing to birds.
- Bird-Repellent Coatings: Apply bird-repellent coatings or paints to your drone’s body. These coatings often contain capsaicin, the active ingredient in chili peppers, which deters birds.
- Modified Propellers: Use propellers with serrated edges or irregular shapes, making them less appealing to birds.
I think I’d be too nervous to try aluminum foil.
It was. No slopes here.Sound awesome!
Man, that is absolute RUBBISH! AI has got a long way to go.This just may be the worst AI-generated text I've seen. I'd steer well clear of whatever website delivered this.
- Install loudspeakers or sirens on a drone?
- Repel birds with the active ingredient in pepper spray? (Wear gloves and a respirator when handling your drone.)
- Irregular shaped propellers with saw teeth?
- Protrusions on drones are appealing to birds? Enlarge the shell to shroud the four motors and props?
- Magic bird-repellent coatings? (Ask for a spray can at the hardware store and see what happens.)
- Bright colors scare birds? (So strawberries and apples are bird proof?)
Don’t bother, it will just get them more page hits and encourage them to post more rubbish!Sorry to inform you guys it wasn’t A.I. at all. Well let me rethink that maybe they used A.I. on their website, I don’t know I didn’t look it up using AI. I could post the source.
In the past, I've posted photos of birds perched on highway signs with highly reflective surfaces and other shiny things. I just did a brief search for examples and ran across several references to the fact that some birds (crows, ravens, magpies, jays, and others) are attracted to shiny objects.
Forty or so years ago, I remember people hanging aluminum foil pie pans in fruit trees, believing that birds would be repelled. It seems that it's now understood that it doesn't work. I haven't seen any examples in quite a while.
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Irregular shaped propellers with saw teeth?


Agreed...Spraying stuff into the air with your Drone would be of keen interest to the E.P.A. and spraying Pepper spray downwind from somebody might be a problem. It just may be considered weaponizing your Drone I wouldnt touch that!!Repel birds with the active ingredient in pepper spray?
A reflective tape would only work against birds with head-mounted headlights.reflective tape to discourage birds?
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