3Thumbflyer
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- Aug 24, 2017
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Thread was started about 10:30 yesterday.This is quite a bit late. April 1st was about 3 months ago.
Also put the child in a bicycle helmet.As a fairly new grandfather myself (my first grandchild is just over 14 months old), I say go for it! If some of the comments here are correct, at the very least it will make a terrific physics experiment to help teach him about mass vs weight, inertia, etc.
I agree. Plus it will show him how to do something different, overcome obstacles and find solutions. We have time and the end event is not the only accomplishment.As a fairly new grandfather myself (my first grandchild is just over 14 months old), I say go for it! If some of the comments here are correct, at the very least it will make a terrific physics experiment to help teach him about mass vs weight, inertia, etc.
Will do. ThanksAlso put the child in a bicycle helmet.
My Grandson weighs about 75% less, and we will not attempt a flight in wind.
He’ll be no higher than the top bunk of a bunk bed. His velocity will be no greater than a slow walk. If those two things are considered a danger, then he will be in danger.I was hoping you were just trolling us. Most responses (including mine) reflect that.
I still hope you aren’t serious. Child endangerment laws were devised kids so can’t consent from this kind of threats.
Thanks. I have always found that risk and reward are proportional. And failure, it’s a learning event. I could do something much safer and easier with my Grandson, but I want him to experience an unusual challenge. And for a kid to fly at 8 years old makes a good start.Also a grandparent here... GO FOR IT.
We need more risktakers not more pansies. Better than playing video games. It will be great for memories. And you will learn problem-solving. I did stuff like this all the time as a kid with my friends. We all survived and became successful because of our drive and learned to overcome obstacles.
Attaching a small squeeze on fishing weight will prevent that. My support wires will be made from leader wire with crimped ends, from my tackle boxI would also be concern with strings or ropes catching blade of the UAV and blade fragments hitting child
I’m debating on sharing any video for that very reason....and some silly claim of child endangerment. That topic has already come up here on this forum. After wondering why children have become such whimps, I see they’re just a product of their environment.Remember when Larry Walters went up in a lawn chair tied to weather balloons? The FAA was ticked off as I recall. But he went a lot higher than 6 feet AGL!
Attaching a rope adds the weight of that rope you are back to square one of overcoming the weight to lift ratio.I can attach a rope as a safety, and if it will barely lift the weight, any loss of UAV will bring it down slowly....I think.lol
I used to do the same thing jumping off garage roofs and walls.Just make sure that this is well thought out and there are safety precautions in place. 58 lb kids are very resilient. Ask me how I know.
I used to jump off 8 foot roofs as a kid and practice rolling out of it into the grass below. People thought I was nuts. I was not nuts , but at that age I thought I was virtually indestructible. That was actually a tame example of some of the things I have done.
Then you get older and that thought process slowly changes...
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