Richard
Final Approach
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- Feb 27, 2005
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Ack...city life
.....Wrong weapon. Need a non-percussive device, maybe some kind of slingshot?
.....Wrong weapon. Need a non-percussive device, maybe some kind of slingshot?
.....
A good Benjamin Franklin .22 air rifle reaches out pretty well with a dozen pumps on it.
I believe the FAA has gone to court several times accusing people of flying a drone in violation of airspace regs. Not going to look it up but I know they lost one round a while back. As I recall, drone flying is restricted to a limited group right now, and requires a permit.
Although quieter, in most places the police view air rifles the same as regular firearms. The only difference is the propellant.
I think it would take a hotter laser than that, maybe an EMP weapon would work better. A good Benjamin Franklin .22 air rifle reaches out pretty well with a dozen pumps on it.
.....
In this case, the operator was being perfectly safe, had line of sight, was at a safe altitude, and was not over anyone else's property. He did nothing wrong, legally or otherwise.
Hmmm, a number of posts already on both sides of the debate and yet, and yet, no one has pointed out that the drone operator was quite possibly breaking the law while flying the drone. (would seem from the article that it was not within his range of vision at the time)
As for the appropriate load for drone, I don't think salt will get the distance unless the thing is within 50' of you. Salt doesn't carry well. I would use #2 bird, and depending on how good a shot, maybe #3 depending on how flitty it is, and distance.
As for shooting "wildly" I would disagree. The shooter apparently hit was he was aiming at, we don't have any reports of collateral damage, and no one is complaining about pellets on their car, or windows, etc. Nothing wild about this shooting.
I"m guessing in Joyzee, he's toast. In TX, I doubt there would be an arrest. If it did go to court, I can't see anyone voting to convict. Sure as hell, if I'm defending the guy, I bring a drone into court(for information and clarity of course), and hover it right over the jury box for a good 15 minutes; "Not guilty!"
brian];1572393 said:Guess I missed that part. If this is the case, then the guy with the shotgun is just a mean old coot...
I doubt it will see more than restitution and fine.
OTOH, I see a major market for a jamming device for these things.
brian];1572341 said:You know, the best option might just be a potato gun! One shot, lots of mass, one pile of electronics.
Hmm, I could alway borrow my uncles
How much of an annoyance is a drone that's used once over a neighbor's property?
Compared, let's say, to a dog that barks incessantly on the same property.
I doubt it will see more than restitution and fine.
OTOH, I see a major market for a jamming device for these things.
Jamming these things is not going to be as simple as you probably think. This is not like grandpa's RC plane where you just jam 72.33mhz and it falls out of the sky.
First of all, to jam it, you need to transmit on the same frequency as the controller, with a more powerful signal than the controller. In order to do that, you would need to know what frequency they're using. And these controllers are frequency hopping, spread spectrum. So you can't just jam one frequency. You need a broadband jammer that will overpower a whole range of frequencies.
You have no way of knowing what band they're using. Could be UHF. Could be 2.4ghz. Could be 5.8ghz. So first you need to guess which it is. Then guess which range of frequencies they're using. Then hope you have enough power to capture the receiver over the actual controller. And while doing this, you're ruining everything else using the same band, like your home wifi for example. I use frequency hopping UHF over quite a long range. It is unlikely you'll ever jam it to a point where I can no longer control it.
Furthermore, jamming it will not make it just explode and fall out of the sky. Upon loss of communication, these things have failsafe procedures. If mine lose communication with the controller, it will turn around, fly back to where it took off, and land itself.
Now if those features are disabled, it will probably just fall out of the sky or otherwise crash. A crash that you were a part of causing. And which neither you or the operator have any control over. So if it falls out of the sky and lands on grandma's head, or crashes through your bedroom window, you're now a part of that crash.
And to add further to the mess about jamming... The FCC prohibits the sale or use of jammers by the public in the US. They take a very dim view of such actions. Note that they just went after Marriott for $600,000 for jamming private hot spots in one of their hotels, forcing people to use the service provided by the hotel (at an exorbitant price, I might add). Attempt to jam the link to a drone at your peril.
Undoubtedly their argument was obligatory non-sense that wouldn't pass a 6th grade debate club. But would you expect them to say "oh darn, you got us. Sorry." How else are their attorneys going to get paid???
No. Operating for commercial purpose is receiving compensation for the service you provide. He was taking photos of his friend's new house. Because it's fun and cool. I take pictures of my friend's homes all the time for them.
Unless the guy operating it was standing on Elmer Fudd's property, nobody was trespassing. All his flight was legal, safe, and respectful. The fact the Elmer Fudd the angry neighbor can't control his emotions and has a poor grasp on reality doesn't make it ok.
If the drone was hovering outside his window, or otherwise legitimately being creepy and invading their privacy, then I would laugh at it being shot down too. And it would serve the owner right. But a few hundred feet doing real estate photography of someone else's property, no.
Another useful example: I overflew my friend's rooftop, videotaping the condition of the roof tiles after a recent hailstorm. The roofing contractors were able to submit their estimates without even climbing up on the roof.
I also took overhead shots of my sister's recent outdoor wedding, including some setup shots of the locale, and gave the footage to her wedding videographer. He folded it into his footage and now ALL of his clients want overhead shots... it's that impressive.
All you cowboys who want to jam these devices or shoot them down really ought to spend some time on YouTube and Vimeo to see the incredibly artistic and beautiful footage that people who know what they're doing are creating with these things.
Basically any? Accuracy drops off an the pattern opens up at 150ft. But is still perfectly effective beyond that for this purpose.Please let me know where I can pick up a shotgun with an effective range of a few hundred feet.
If it was in range of his shotgun, it was close enough to legitimately invade his privacy.
I completely agree. That is creepy and obnoxious. It is completely legal since you can't hover-trespass. But that doesn't make it "ok". Frankly if you nailed it with your pellet gun doing that, I would probably laugh and it would serve the operator right. You'd probably get a visit from the police at the very least. But I wouldn't blame you at all.I can understand how this guy felt. A few weeks back I was sitting on my back deck enjoying cigars and some booze with my buddies when a quad copter flew overhead about 40-50 feet and sat there for nearly 5 minutes. It angered me enough that I brought out the pellet rifle before it skittered off real quick...
I don't see how when a kid can walk into WalMart and buy one.
Another useful example: I overflew my friend's rooftop, videotaping the condition of the roof tiles after a recent hailstorm. The roofing contractors were able to submit their estimates without even climbing up on the roof.
I also took overhead shots of my sister's recent outdoor wedding, including some setup shots of the locale, and gave the footage to her wedding videographer. He folded it into his footage and now ALL of his clients want overhead shots... it's that impressive.
All you cowboys who want to jam these devices or shoot them down really ought to spend some time on YouTube and Vimeo to see the incredibly artistic and beautiful footage that people who know what they're doing are creating with these things.
I also took overhead shots of my sister's recent outdoor wedding, including some setup shots of the locale, and gave the footage to her wedding videographer. He folded it into his footage and now ALL of his clients want overhead shots... it's that impressive.
Wrong weapon. Need a non-percussive device, maybe some kind of slingshot?
I'm sure that seemed like a good idea at the time to the newbie who thinks it is a cool toy. I've come to realize that I am flying an exposed hedge trimmer / lawn mower with 6 high speed spinning knives. Buzzing people gives you a cool effect. But not worth the risk in my opinion.