hello all, I will be visiting the USA (Miami, Frt Lauderdale) Do I have to register my drone with the FAA to fly in Florida if I'm not a US citizen ?
Thanks
Thanks
hello all, I will be visiting the USA (Miami, Frt Lauderdale) Do I have to register my drone with the FAA to fly in Florida if I'm not a US citizen ?
Thanks
Thanks for the replys, I was under the impression that Florida had more of a strict policy than other states.
How do you US folks deal now with the Paragraph C2 of the 336 Section (below), in general?
(c) MODEL AIRCRAFT DEFINED... [omissis]
(2) flown within visual line of sight of the person operating the aircraft;
Should anyone be caught flying BLOS is he not anymore covered by Sec. 336 and is he considered guilty of not having registered with the FAA?
Heck, this bird goes BLOS after 200-300 meters (1,000 feet) - if you have really good eyes!
How can someone prove what I could or could not see at any given moment in time. The rule doesn't have any specifics about the type of line of sight I must maintain (it doesn't say "unassisted" or else those with glasses would get hurt... in fact, it welcomes the use of a "spotter" if I fly POV, so why not a telescope for example?), so if push came to shove that leaves a lot of room for loopholes. Until they start clamping down on the LOS rule, its probably a non-issue. If someone does something bad BLOS, they will still have a chance to defend themselves anyway, and it will be a difficult (if not impossible) thing to prove under the current vague rule. So far has anyone been successfully fined for flying BLOS? I'm not aware of anyone, and would be shocked if there was.
Thanks for thatFlorida does indeed have some more stringent laws on the books - most of it is common sense but you can easily run afoul of some of the rules: Nice outline is at:
Florida Drone Laws (2017) -
Thanks hats helpfulThe FAA regulates things in the air, the States (e.g., Florida) regulate the ground. So States may be able to control where you take off and land, but they cannot control how and where you fly. What I do when traveling around the US is I go to the city's official web site and search for "drone", "UAS", and "sUAS", to see if they have drone restrictions. All US National Parks prohibit drone flying, and the Everglades National Park is a major part of the area around Miami and Ft Lauderdale, so beware of the Everglades. State Parks often restrict flying as well. I think Miami and Ft Lauderdale are relatively drone-friendly, as opposed to the Los Angeles, California area which is a minefield of drone restrictions. There are a number of Mavic flyers who post photos and videos from southern Florida on this site. I don't think you'll have an issue in Florida.
Miami: City of Miami - Official Website
Miami Beach: City of Miami Beach - Official Website
Miami-Dade County: http://www.miamidade.gov/
Ft. Lauderdale: City of Fort Lauderdale, FL : Home
The only thing I could see is if the drone went over a hill top, but still close. I had that experience flying out in the desert where it flew over a hill, I could still hear it but couldn't see it.
Sure. A 100x telescope works even better... if you can keep sight of a moving drone with it.Maybe a pair of binoculars would help.
Sure. A 100x telescope works even better... if you can keep sight of a moving drone with it.
Holding a binocular while you have two hands busy on a RC is not an option, and spotting half square foot of a gray Mavic on the background of a thick wood (I do not want on purpose to speak of a background of a skyline of buildings, because that should be forbidden... right?) is very, very difficult even with a binocular. Unless you hire a good spotter and give him the task of not loosing sight of your Mavic. But at that point you still are not flying within LOS. The spotter has LOS, not you... which brings me back to square one:
Should anyone be caught by a law enforcing agent (whoever) flying a drone BLOS is he not anymore covered by Sec. 336 and is he considered guilty of not having registered with the FAA?
How would anyone be caught flying BLOS? When did LE (or anyone) gain the ability to see what I could see LOS? Maybe I could, maybe I couldn't, but can you PROVE I was BLOS at the time you "caught" me? How???
Florida does indeed have some more stringent laws on the books - most of it is common sense but you can easily run afoul of some of the rules: Nice outline is at:
Florida Drone Laws (2017) -
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