Last edited:
Your gimbal already looks bent and you can see the gap on the side of the camera. That'll work in your favor and the roll joint has some flex to it. I bent mine back by hand after a crash.Problem is that the gimbal flipped backwards clamping onto the wire. It's not easy to flip the gimbal back when you have it in your hands so I doubt grabbing it with a lasso will work. You'd probably have to yank it real hard to yank it free. Probably will break the pitch motor or the mount in the process.
Look around for a utility truck.Have $50 or better yet $100 bill ready and ask for advice.Hope they advise you to trade the $100 for getting the drone down.
Are you bonkers? The voltages carried in those lines can jump a gap of up to 9 feet. Asking someone without the required knowledge of working near high voltage is asking for trouble.
Any ideas on how to recover the bird? (It is about 200 ft. up hanging in the power lines).
Call the power company ? Let me know if you get it down
What a sad ending, I do feel bad for him. I’ve seen dead hawks hanging from power lines after their feet got fried onto them, and that Mavic looks like a dead bird hanging like that too.
Hope he will get lucky and a lineman will recover it and just not say anything... or it’s an expensive loss but not as much as it would have been paying for a crew to fo go recover it.
There are a lot of power line arcing videos online, just watching those makes you realize its a very bad thing to mess around with power lines. I also have personal experience with arcing a high boltage transmission line- actually by accidentally causing it when I was a kid. We were flying a long tailed dragon mylar kite at a soccer field, and it lay down across the top of the line. Man, it glowed green and made a huge buzzing noise, but the weirdest part was seeing a blue arc traveling down the line. There was no kite left except a smoking spot on the wires where it touched. We caused a temporary power brownout that even affected the police station, and the power company had to repair the parts of the cables where the kite touched. It was a long time ago, when mylar kites were rather new, so the power company wasn’t really up on pursuing people who caused line accidents yet. I imagine that’s changed now.
When you don't see the wire:
How about zip tying a broom stick to another drone and trying the ol' wack-a-mole trick. you'd have to turn off the down sensors and you would have little visibility out the camera. Just thronging out ideas.
be sure to have some guys waiting underneath with a bed sheet to catch it.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.