THE CYBORG
Well-Known Member
Legality aside I prefer to be able to see where my expensive toys are when in the air.
Most people would be my guess.
All you have to do is use the powerful LED light on the bottom of the droneMaybe this has already be presented, but just in case, here it is:
My Mavic 2Z has a body roughly 0.25 ft wide. This is the most visible part when flying away or toward the pilot. Now the accepted angular resolution of the human eye is about 1/60 degree or 0.000291 radian.
Calculations:
Distance X Angle (in radians) = Arc length
Distance X 0.000921 = 0.25 ft whence distance = 859 ft or 0.16 mile.
Now even if we up the angular resolution of your eye by a factor of 4, we get about .064 mile straight line.
Note: if the drone is at h=300 ft, the horizontal distance is 804 ft.
I challenge anyone to let someone fly your drone out somewhere randomly to a distance of, say 0.64 mile, while you keep your back turned and then you turn around and see the drone.
Who flies their Mavic 2 drone no farther than 1000 feet? As for myself, I have trouble seeing it four or five hundred feet away.
Look at the date or how long ago the video was posted.As a potential new owner in the very near future, this is one of my questions.
YouTube is full of videos of people doing range tests and range hacks, some of them linked to this very site. I think I saw 11 miles on a video yesterday.
I know some of these videos may be from places where these rules don't exist, but definitely not all.
The FAA’s main concern is uncontrolled flying that puts lives and vital infrastructure in danger. The agency must be assured that drones sharing the sky with airplanes will not result in midair collisions and that the risk of damage to people and property on the ground is mitigated.Out of curiosity what might you suggest the manufacturers could be doing? The currently available models all perform BVLOS exceptionally well.
How will people who ignore rules be held to account without enforcement?The issue is not enforcement, but being responsible for causing an accident, either fatal or not.
and with a strob you could probably see it a half mile or moreI have a Mavic Air. In good light, I can reacquire it visually out to around 400 meters.
At night, about 300 meters or so against a mostly dark background. That green taillight strobes pretty brightly.
Depends on the resolution, but on an Occusync 2 system like the M2, 50-60 ms is common on 1080P 30FPS. I don't have enough experience flying quads analog on 5.8mhz to know the latency, but the video is outstanding, and I'm not good enough flying those little buggers for the latency to affect my flying.What latency do you experience with your FPV setup?
(USA)
Since there is no distance specified for a hobbyist concerning VLOS, I easily become envious of those pilots who fly the DRONE out to 3~infinity miles doing their range tests. Their eyes are absolutely far superior to mine in their ability to maintain VLOS.
If Mother Nature can provide an eagle with the ability to spot a mouse dinner from a distance of three miles, then why not me with my DRONE at 1?
When did the MM come out?Look at the date or how long ago the video was posted.
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