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Referring to this post i got attached by a bird at 300 feet. I would like a definitive answer before I ruin my mavic pro's "aesthetics"
Referring to this post i got attached by a bird at 300 feet. I would like a definitive answer before I ruin my mavic pro's "aesthetics"
No it does not. Been tried for years (in other arenas) with no success. There will be lots of anecdotal accounts ("It worked for me in X situation") and lots of enterprises willing to sell you the stuff but they've been proven scientifically as ineffective.
It may slightly increase bird "awareness" of your drone (being able to detect it and avoid it) but it will not "scare" birds away. More effective and practical would simply be to utilize one of the mini Strobon Cree lights. (STROBON Standalone - Flytron)
However, there's no need to freak out about birds and try to scare them away from your drone (despite what everyone on this and other forums says). They will generally try to avoid you (they don't like colliding with things in the air, as any pilot would) and if you try to avoid them, you'll be fine.
Well, you are in a national forest....so that's to be anticipated. I learned this just two weeks ago. I was less than 200 feet up and watched a hawk come from know where obliterate my drone! Absolutely ridiculous.I would have to disagree with you about birds ignoring you. I have had 2 bird strikes in the Tonto National Forest, there has been a problem with Hawks and Eagles attacking RC planes and quads so much so that the park rangers have posted a sign showing the area in the National Forest that they nest/hunt. Someone just posted a video the other day after being attacked by a bird. I now just do not fly when I see birds of prey. After loosing two Bebop 2's, I will usually just stay at a spot for a little while having a snack to see if there are any birds of prey around. 95% of the time I have no problems with birds but it is a problem.
There are no "solutions that work".Let's stick to solutions that work
I think you'll find that the FAA does not "own" the sky. It manages human operations within US airspace.Sure, birds, along with all wildlife, do have the right to defend their territory, but they don't have a right to randomly take out my drone when it's not a threat to them.
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Technically the FAA owns the sky, not the birds. When I'm flying legally, I'd really like it if some random bird suddenly did NOT decide to destroy my drone.
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