- Joined
- Mar 13, 2017
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- 64
Haven't seen specific discussion regarding the specific rules of flying in the national airspace system here in the US. Wanted to open the topic up to discuss.
From the reading I've found (AMA model aviation and FAA) - you are not allowed, prohibited from flying beyond line-of-sight of your machine. Regardless if you are Part 107 operator or a recreational or hobby UAS flier.
Furthermore, you cannot fly FPV without a spotter. The spotter is required to maintain line-of-sight of your machine and be prepared to take control of the machine.
It is hard to see a Mavic at 400'... never mind a mile away (5280') or more.
What kind of problems (legal problems) are we skirting if we are flying these machines beyond line-of-sight?
Wonder what impact these restrictions will have on flying drones. I have enjoyed flying my machine some distance away to make a video and fly it back. I think thats a fun part of having the machine to begin with.
From the reading I've found (AMA model aviation and FAA) - you are not allowed, prohibited from flying beyond line-of-sight of your machine. Regardless if you are Part 107 operator or a recreational or hobby UAS flier.
Furthermore, you cannot fly FPV without a spotter. The spotter is required to maintain line-of-sight of your machine and be prepared to take control of the machine.
It is hard to see a Mavic at 400'... never mind a mile away (5280') or more.
What kind of problems (legal problems) are we skirting if we are flying these machines beyond line-of-sight?
Wonder what impact these restrictions will have on flying drones. I have enjoyed flying my machine some distance away to make a video and fly it back. I think thats a fun part of having the machine to begin with.