The aircraft is 15 months old.
I do not use the same battery with each flight. i rotate between the 3 that i have.
I do not use the same battery with each flight. i rotate between the 3 that i have.
Mine did that once but thankfully I was only 10 feet off the ground at my home point. I suspected it was because there was ice on the props. Hadn’t even thought about that with the freezing temps. I just chalked it up to my stupid not-thinking and dumb luck at being literally over the landing area.Hi there. a building close to me was on fire so i took a flight to see from the air (This is an area well flown by me and my Mavic Pro)
The aircraft said "Landing" without warning and continued to land without the option to return home (Home GPS co-ordinates recorded before flight)
Try as i might, i could not gain control. Shortly thereafter the link was lost so the "Find my Drone feature" cannot show the exact position of the aircraft.
The sad part is that it probably landed in busy taxi rank (If this is the case, its gone forever...)
Has anyone had a similar experience? Me not a very happy person....
Is the telemetry stored on the controller and the aircraft?
I can tell you as just coming into retirement from being a captain with City of Austin fire department, as of today we don’t carry any devices that would mess with drones. Not saying anything about what command staff are doing, but we would tend to push that off to the police department. Our involvement with drones is more in rescue and scene size upsI would be interested to know if some Fire Depts. can now erect a TFR around a fire zone. They certainly should have that ability and it would explain this forced landing incident (craft finds itself suddenly in a NFZ).
If so, it would probably depend on how close you were to the fire event.
Chris
You flown to a fire scene ignoring the FAA rules, then posted all the details here. Losing the drone is the last thing you need to worry about. You better hope that no one would bother to Id your drone/you and impose hefty penalties.
It's already been pointed out numerous times that the OP is in South Africa, so the FAA rules are irrelevant.
Additionally, if you want to be picky, there are no specific FAA rules about flying near fires - flying in a TFR without authorization would fall under the FAA. Interfering with emergency services is a completely different issue, and not under the jurisdiction of the FAA.
Please people DO YOUR HOMEWORK BEFORE POSTING HERE!!!!!
Page 1 row 2 column 2
“Never fly near emergency response efforts such as fires.”
Same as FAA regulation.
You say it’s not a FAA regulation? Then why it’s on FAA site?
the FAA guidance that you posted is about wildfires, not structure fires, and stems from the concerns about firefighting aircraft used against wildfires.
It's a bit ironic that you would try to lecture about doing homework on a subject that you know almost nothing about.
It's already been pointed out numerous times that the OP is in South Africa, so the FAA rules are irrelevant.
Here is some common sense for you, do not look to the FAA rules and regulations for ANY guidance on rules and regulations in South Africa.Not trying to lecture anyone else, just the OP.
I may not know a whole lot about this topic, but at least I have some common sense. Drone and fire don’t mix PERIOD, not just limited to wildfire. FAA only talks about wildfire likely because they don’t have jurisdiction elsewhere, but the same principle extends to other fires. Take a look at this article.
Ironically SA has very similar rules as outlined by FAA, literally the very first result of a quick google search. Yet people don’t bother to look up and think it’s ok to fly near a fire over there.
Not trying to lecture anyone else, just the OP.
Please people DO YOUR HOMEWORK BEFORE POSTING HERE!!!!!
You say it’s not a FAA regulation? Then why it’s on FAA site?
I may not know a whole lot about this topic, but at least I have some common sense. Drone and fire don’t mix PERIOD, not just limited to wildfire. FAA only talks about wildfire likely because they don’t have jurisdiction elsewhere, but the same principle extends to other fires. Take a look at this article.
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