I guess I'm just not pretentious enough to compare myself to an airbus pilot that literally has the lives of hundreds of people in his or her hands every time he or she takes off just because I fly remote controlled toys. But whatever makes you sound cool in front of your buddies.....if it works for you go with it I guess.One of the replies mentioned us not being pilots but just controlling a computer. Airbus jets operate via fly by wire. The pilot isn't actually controlling the aircraft directly. Does not mean he or she is not a pilot. When I go out flying with my drone i am piloting it by any definition of the word and that's my story and I'm sticking to it!
// from www.theuav.com
Doesn't matter what some random dude with a website calls it.
// Per FAA
Doesn't matter what government or military call it, they're living in their own world.
Doesn't matter what dictionaries call it, the word "pilot" as applied to aviation is ~100 years old, and its meaning all these years did not need any qualifier whether the person controlling an aircraft is flying with it or not, nobody 100 years ago could imagine that flying a remotely controlled by radio waves aircraft is possible (at that time, even radio was at its infancy).
What matters is what WE call ourselves. If we come up with a term that is used ubiquitously, that's the word that will end up in dictionaries.
And as soon each household will have a drone, almost everyone (esp. male) will have it, calling hundreds of millions of people f'n around with plastic toys, taking selfies, etc. but with their feet planted on the ground - calling all of them "pilots" is nonsense. They're DRONERS. A pilot is a person actually flying with their aircraft.
// Droners sounds like a person hooked on heroin lol.
Urban Dictionary: Droner
How 'bout "DRONIST" then?
dronist - Wiktionary
Does this mean I can't wear my flight suit and look like this when I film with my Mavic now?
![]()
That's it, thanks to the brainstorming, the proper word for a drone operator is found, and it's actually already in use! (e.g. #8 Top Pilot Interview with dronist ''Romeoch'' Romeo Durscher)
dronist - Wiktionary
![]()
Hello, Mavic DRONISTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
(said in "Seinfeld" Newman's voice, "Hello, Jerry" - "Hello, Newman")
We're watching history as it unfolds, dear dronists!
It's still fine to call the act of remote controlling an aircraft "piloting" (i.e. steering, controlling, directing). But not everyone who is piloting, is a pilot. A pilot is a person controlling an aircraft they're onboard of, or attached to, and flying with. A pilot is airborne; a dronist is not.
"Droner" can be used as a derogatory form of "dronist", e.g. someone who flies close to airplanes, breaks the laws, flies recklessly, endangers or annoys people. Droner = dronist + stoner.
/end of polemics
Nuff said!!
Now who else feels like the debate should end here?? That statement was pretty nuclear as far as I'm concerned.
Simple statement of fact only. It has been ended by the info provided in the statement I was referring to. Anyone with an IQ higher than 40 can see that so if you don't then.......NUFF SAID!!Seems to be a popular discussion. Why do you want to end it? I enjoy reading people's opinions even if you don't.
If you are tired of it don't click the link.... Nuff said!!
I agree 100 percent. It is very childish for anyone to say they are a pilot when the only thing they fly is a toy they bought at Best Buy.You all are funny. But I can't stand logical errors so....
I've seen some "real" pilots and their sympathizers use a couple qualifications to denigrate Mavic pilots including but not limited to....
1. Level of tech in the mavic making it "easy to fly"
-since when does capability of a device/craft make its operator somehow lesser....if you drive a Tesla with no gear changes automatic or otherwise it doesn't make you less of a driver when you hit that sweet lap time at laguna seca. Just because the nature of your concerns during the craft's operation have evolved alongside evolving technologies, doesn't mean we need to stick to the old metrics despite their newfound irrelevance. In some ways the mavic is more difficult to pilot in a way a non-stabilized quad could do more easily. There are trade offs everywhere. Autopilot on an airliner doesn't make the pilot any lesser - it's just that the best tool for the job is used, and turns out computers are much better than people at geospatial calculations hence why airliners are on autopilot so often. Just because your car doesn't wobble from side to side and randomly turn left/right/slide a lane over while you're driving it doesn't make you a non-driver, it just means you have a solidly engineered vehicle.
Also, there is a wide gamut of piloting ability with the mavic, just because it's stable and (for the most part) stays where you put it doesn't mean there is no skill to be displayed flying it.
2. No skin in the game / no danger involved.
- please. The mavic can be dangerous if flown dangerously. Somebody can get a concussion if you crash into them. You can probably cause a car accident if you fly where you shouldn't and lose control... you can easily bleed if you encounter the mavic's blades. There are consequences for failure. Maybe not for some of you, but $1000 is also NOT an inconsequential for many, many people.
3. Not in the craft, remote operator.
- a la the matrix prepare to question the nature of your reality! If you're flying FPV, you put on goggles and block out the outside world, for all intents and purposes you are in the craft as far as your brain is concerned. Who here has never naturally flinched at a close call with a tree?
Bottom line, being obsessed with titles is stupid and childish.
True, airliners fly themselves nowadays. The key difference is this. The PILOT in charge of the aircraft carrying hundreds of lives onboard can PILOT the aircraft and its passengers to safety in the event of a complete systems failure by manually controlling the rudder, ailerons, flaps, elevators, engine speed, etc. Hence his or her certification as an actual PILOT. In the event of a failure causing us (drone enthusiasts, RC Hobbyists, Dronist) to have to assume full control of the Mavic, I can confidently say that AT LEAST 85 percent of the DRONISTS, RC HOBBYISTS, or DRONE ENTHUSIASTS on this site would end up inverted and PILOT their Mavic directly into the ground, themselves, or an innocent bystander.You all are funny. But I can't stand logical errors so....
I've seen some "real" pilots and their sympathizers use a couple qualifications to denigrate Mavic pilots including but not limited to....
1. Level of tech in the mavic making it "easy to fly"
-since when does capability of a device/craft make its operator somehow lesser....if you drive a Tesla with no gear changes automatic or otherwise it doesn't make you less of a driver when you hit that sweet lap time at laguna seca. Just because the nature of your concerns during the craft's operation have evolved alongside evolving technologies, doesn't mean we need to stick to the old metrics despite their newfound irrelevance. In some ways the mavic is more difficult to pilot in a way a non-stabilized quad could do more easily. There are trade offs everywhere. Autopilot on an airliner doesn't make the pilot any lesser - it's just that the best tool for the job is used, and turns out computers are much better than people at geospatial calculations hence why airliners are on autopilot so often. Just because your car doesn't wobble from side to side and randomly turn left/right/slide a lane over while you're driving it doesn't make you a non-driver, it just means you have a solidly engineered vehicle.
Also, there is a wide gamut of piloting ability with the mavic, just because it's stable and (for the most part) stays where you put it doesn't mean there is no skill to be displayed flying it.
2. No skin in the game / no danger involved.
- please. The mavic can be dangerous if flown dangerously. Somebody can get a concussion if you crash into them. You can probably cause a car accident if you fly where you shouldn't and lose control... you can easily bleed if you encounter the mavic's blades. There are consequences for failure. Maybe not for some of you, but $1000 is also NOT an inconsequential for many, many people.
3. Not in the craft, remote operator.
- a la the matrix prepare to question the nature of your reality! If you're flying FPV, you put on goggles and block out the outside world, for all intents and purposes you are in the craft as far as your brain is concerned. Who here has never naturally flinched at a close call with a tree?
Bottom line, being obsessed with titles is stupid and
Simple statement of fact only. It has been ended by the info provided in the statement I was referring to. Anyone with an IQ higher than 40 can see that so if you don't then.......NUFF SAID!!
And yet you are still here..... NUFF SAID!!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.