Comment Re:The government = zombies (Score 2) 195
I'm not sure your analogy really works here.
If the humans were well baricaded in a place and they remained safe there from the zombies ever after
I'm not sure your analogy really works here.
If the humans were well baricaded in a place and they remained safe there from the zombies ever after
There's a huge difference between "it would be hard to find out who to charge with a crime" and "it's legal".
And yes, if a object crashes into your house and damages it, the owner or operator is probably liable for the damages. This is not specific to unmanned aircraft -- it applies to manned aircraft and even to things like cars or errant golf balls too.
In any event, I'm no lawyer, but my advice would be to not fire at aircraft flying above your property, no matter how low they may be, how justified you may feel you are or how unlikely you think it is that they could prove it was you. A smarter plan of action would be to call the police if it's causing a problem.
It's not. Those permits were a joke, possibly literally.
And even if that city says it's OK because you have a permit, that won't override the state or federal laws that prohibit firing at aircraft or destroying other people's property. (It might override local ordinances against discharging of firearms in city limits, for example, depending on how it was written and what the local laws are, however.)
That law was a joke. At best it would protect you from municipal ordinances against shooting at unmanned aircraft, but would do nothing to prevent state or federal charges, or a civil lawsuit.
The FAA has a strong interest in keeping people from firing weapons at aircraft, and some city in Colorado isn't going to override that.
I notice that flash is currently goign for about 50 cents a GB and disk about 10 cents.
The $0.50/GB for flash is for the very cheapest SSDs available, and only when they're on a good sale. More likely is $0.75/GB on the low and, and it goes up from there.
As for hard drive prices, the lowest is a good deal cheaper -- you can find 3 TB external drives for around $100 now if you wait for a sale, so that's $0.03/GB. Of course, the prices go up from there, and enterprise level drives are a whole lot more.
(One thing I don't understand, is now external drives are cheaper than internal drives. The external drive is a case around an internal drive -- so you'd expect it to cost more, not less, yet they've been more ever since the floods
This fascistic "only following orders" mindset really needs to be nipped in the bud. America understood that it was unjustifiable in the 1940s, but it's their first refuge now.
America learned that it was unjustifiable only in the very, very most extreme cases in the 1940s.
If your commander orders you to put a bunch of people into a room and fill it with cyanide gas and you do it
But if your orders don't involve killing innocent, unarmed, non-threatening people in cold blood -- America expects you to do what you're told. And really, even if your orders do involve killing innocent, unarmed, non-threatening people in cold blood -- you're expected to do what you're told too.
If your military commander orders you to do something, and you don't do it -- bad things happen to you. Now, there is a small chance that years down the road the courts will vindicate you if you decided not to murder a bunch of people -- but if all you did was protect somebody's right to privacy? Yeah, you're going down.
I do agree, the mindset has issues, but our military commanders expect their orders to be carried out, and dissent is only tolerated in the most extreme cases (cases that should never happen, as such orders should not be given.) But if the order is to tap some phones or sniff some networks
By that rationale, a metaball is a deadly weapon as well.
No, there is no official definition of "drone". The FAA uses different terms -- they don't call them drones. The media calls them drones (often incorrectly), but the FAA has more specific terms that they use.
That said: This hasn't been a problem. I know of no cases of RC to full sized aviation mid-airs.
I imagine they happen with some regularity at places where R/C and manned aircraft share the airspace -- for example, at Torrey Pines before R/C use was banned (not sure what the current status is.) Of course, nobody was arrested in those incidents and I don't even know that there were any injuries -- but there were some collisions.
isn't its 5,000 max for ultralight aircraft. anything above crosses into commercial.
You don't seem to have a clue what you're talking about.
The maximum weight for an ultralight in the US is 254 lbs.
As for commercial use, that depends on the use, not so much the plane. If you're getting paid to fly Cub (at around 1000 lbs) -- that's commercial and requires a commercial license. If you're just flying it for fun, no -- but you will need a private or sport pilot license for it.
Those rules are simple. We stay under 400ft.
There is no such rule for R/C planes.
FAA advisory circular 91 57 suggests that, but it's not a rule -- that's why it's called "advisory".
The AMA rules (not law, but we can call them rules) say stay under 400 feet if you're close to an airport, unless you coordinate with the airport.
Most powered R/C flights are indeed under 400 feet, but glider pilots break that ceiling with every good flight.
Modern electric RC trainers like a slow stick are almost unbreakable.
A slow stick is very easy to break. It's relatively easy to fix as well, but it's far from "almost unbreakable".
A much more durable plane would be a foam flying wing like a Zagi -- motor in the back, foam everywhere else. That's much more likely to survive a hard crash than a slow stick.
As far as the FAA getting on people's case, it usually doesn't matter if it's a R/C plane or drone at all -- what matters is if the use is recreational or commercial.
FAA regs specifically mention AMA rules. So yes, they are included in FAA regs.
Citation required.
Show me where the FAA regulations specifically mention AMA rules and give them the weight of law. (And no, Advisory circular 91 57 isn't it.)
Most single engine planes are under 5k lbs.
In general an ultralight has to be under 254 lbs and there's some other limitations. And then you don't need a license to fly them, but they're still subject to many of the FAA regulations -- in particular about where they can fly.
I've noticed several design suggestions in your code.