swooshdave
Well-Known Member
Please - do tell us what the flaws were...
As someone pointed out that plane can’t go that fast low enough to hit a drone.
Please - do tell us what the flaws were...
As someone pointed out that plane can’t go that fast low enough to hit a drone.
That is not the point...
As @sar104 points out;
They proved that if you build a large drone rifle, and you lock it in a vise aimed perfectly at the 5 inch tall leading edge of an old, built for speed, lightweight wing making sure to hit the void between structural segments also making sure there are no external forces like air pressure, wind, or pilot input, Take careful aim, after maybe a few less impressive control shots. You can make a hole in the wing ALMOST as big as a small Gel boneless simulated bird.
It is Mayhem, The world is sure to fall to drones.
Actually what they showed is simply that a Phantom-sized drone can do structural damage to a general aviation wing. Not surprising, despite all the bluster in these discussions that these things would just bounce off with little damage, but still a useful data point, especially if it encourages funding for a more comprehensive study.
But, feel free to move the goal posts, and try to argue that the damage is irrelevant because such a collision will never happen. Far too unlikely. Especially as such collisions have already occurred - that makes it even less likely that it will ever happen again - yes? Or that a real aircraft would probably be going a bit slower at likely collision altitudes, and would be just fine.
The posts are PLANTED, and further supported by this study. Two collisions recorded, no significant damage. Perfect worst case scenario man made test, pretty much a bird strike.
Not a catastrophic event. Are you saying more money needs to be spent just so someone can figure out out how to down a commercial flight with a one pound toy? That is just dumb.
Fair enough. I was discussing and giving alternative points, You seem stuck on we need to spend tons money on research till we figure out how to crash a plane with a drone, because it refuses to happen in real life.I'm sorry, but I'm not interested in arguing this with you any more.
I have a few questions for everyone who fly's beyond VLOS and who is challenging the test that is the basis of this thread.
"Would you like to volunteer to prove the test was flawed?"
"Would you like to fly towards a drone in a plane and see what happens?"
"Say you had the opportunity to fly in all sorts of planes from large commercial to small, single engine planes (they use airports as well)"
I wonder how may brave UAV pilots we have!!!!!!!!!!
Do you mean that everyone who flies VLOS, has different numbers about the frequency of drone-aircraft collisions?I have a few questions for everyone who fly's beyond VLOS and who is challenging the test that is the basis of this thread.
"Would you like to volunteer to prove the test was flawed?"
"Would you like to fly towards a drone in a plane and see what happens?"
"Say you had the opportunity to fly in all sorts of planes from large commercial to small, single engine planes (they use airports as well)"
I wonder how may brave UAV pilots we have!!!!!!!!!!
Silly comment really...?
How about, think of the wing of the plane, as a target.....
The drone, or Gel 'bird' is an arrow....
I can fire the arrow, directly at the target, and hit bullseye, if I'm a good shot..
Now if I juxtapose, I throw the target at the arrow......
In real terms, this test is only showing what could happen, if.... the planets align and I win the superlottery.. now, that is far from impossible!!
Do you mean that everyone who flies VLOS, has different numbers about the frequency of drone-aircraft collisions?
Absolutely not.
As UAV pilots we put things in the sky. We are responsible for that. We are debating the results if something hits the thing we put in the sky, an aeroplane, a helicopter, a micro light etc.
The question I have asked is:
"Would you like to be in the plane that hits the drone?"
Don't forget it could be a big plane or a little plane.
The answer is of course NO, no one would want to be in a plane that hits a drone.
End of argument, fly drones responsibility so that the likelihood of causing damage to the other things that fly in the sky is negligible.
I saw that the other day. I suspect the smaller, collapsible drones like the Pro and Air would do significantly less damage. They will still probably punch a hole, just smaller. I would not want to hit an Inspire in a plane...
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