Not a flyer yet, but want to know if these drones can be flown and retrieved to a sailboat with its attendant rigging.
Gloves are good idea... I’d recommend Kevlar filetting gloves.... my first prop cut from this went deep.Welcome to the forum.
Yep, lots do this, try it only on still water to start, work your way up.
Might pay to try and find some sort of very thin tight fitting leather gloves, like driving gloves.
They'd stop the worst of cuts if you did get a little mishap.
If searching the forum, search for land hand catch ship boat, vary the terms a bit, there must be 20+ good threads here form over the years.
Gloves are good idea... I’d recommend Kevlar filetting gloves.... my first prop cut from this went deep.
Welcome to the forum! I’ve flown from our sailboat’s cockpit with boom fixed amidship, but it has been under very ideal conditions. While fishing around sunrise in the San Francisco Bay, the water was mirror-like and US pennant was perfectly still (no wind). In other words, you won’t want to fly when you want to sail.Not a flyer yet, but want to know if these drones can be flown and retrieved to a sailboat with its attendant rigging.
Welcome aboard mate first !! What kind of drone are you going to be launching from this boat? Also, I would probably recommend getting some stick time before you attempt to land by catching it w/ your hand or even landing on this sailboat that you're referring to! You need to get some more experience landing on hard and flat surfaces like [B]pelagic_one[/B] refers too in his post! I have owned a Dji Spark / Dji Mavic Air and now I have the Dji Mavic Pro and I never NOT ones tried to hand catch my drones when coming in for a landing, its just not safe and I have over 80 missions and over 15 hrs behind the sticks. It's just not safe in my personal opinion especially if your flying any of the Mavic series drones from DJI!!! You have to remember, these are toys these are machines and they can take your fingers right off! Also, you have to take in consideration that these Mavic Pros just hovering the propellers spin the motors at about 5500 RPM which is enough to send you to the hospital if you're not super careful so thats why I never hand launch or catch them when landing its to dangerous especially for a newbie! Get some stick time first and then maybe try landing your drone on the boat first but I would stay away from hand catching your landings! Who ever made that video on the Volvo race teams is a complete Moran and has to respect for the drone and his crew! If that guy did not have his rain coat on they most likely would be calling the coast Guard since his arms would been sliced up pretty badly! What a great video of what not to do [B]MAvic_South_Oz[/B]! That Phantom should have never been launched in the first place due to how bad of conditions out at sea were!! Just a dumb rookie mistake that does not respect his crew or the drone! and common sense!Not a flyer yet, but want to know if these drones can be flown and retrieved to a sailboat with its attendant rigging.
Or try some TIG welding gloves, they are thin kid leather.Welcome to the forum.
Yep, lots do this, try it only on still water to start, work your way up.
Might pay to try and find some sort of very thin tight fitting leather gloves, like driving gloves.
They'd stop the worst of cuts if you did get a little mishap.
If searching the forum, search for land hand catch ship boat, vary the terms a bit, there must be 20+ good threads here form over the years.
I have owned a Dji Spark / Dji Mavic Air and now I have the Dji Mavic Pro and [/B]I never NOT ones tried to hand catch my drones when coming in for a landing, its just not safe and I have over 80 missions and over 15 hrs behind the sticks. It's just not safe in my personal opinion
Who ever made that video on the Volvo race teams is a complete Moran and has to [/B]respect for the drone and his crew! If that guy did not have his rain coat on they most likely would be calling the coast Guard since his arms would been sliced up pretty badly! What a great video of what not to do [B]MAvic_South_Oz[/B]! That Phantom should have never been launched in the first place due to how bad of conditions out at sea were!! Just a dumb rookie mistake that does not respect his crew or the drone! and common sense!
Safe Flying from FL,
FLPilotshark
I'm trying to figure out if that takes immense skill or massive stupidity?? Not with my Drone, that's for sure.This has been posted here before, but always good to watch . . . get good at it, and you can do this . . .
Yes .. it can be done.Not a flyer yet, but want to know if these drones can be flown and retrieved to a sailboat with its attendant rigging.
I am in absolute agreement with your statement @MAvic_South_Oz, in that it’s really quite safe for some people. I’m reading other posts describing this task/skill like we’re juggling ‘live‘ chainsaws.Hand launching and catching is done by many, I do it maybe 30% of my flights with (land) terrain considerations etc, it's a very handy skill to learn, and to be honest quite safe unless someone is really that much of a clutz, they have poor hand / eye coordination etc.
Confidence is another thing, you have to be confident when doing it.
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