- Joined
- Jan 12, 2016
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 5
- Age
- 69
- Location
- 35.5487233,-97.5908787
- Website
- torks.org
I'll stand by ehat I said. I'll stop flying RC if it will make the skys safer. Man-ed planes have the rightaway. But dont you think it would be better if the maned planes knew where rc planes fly (where rc fields are) and stayed away?Forgive my bluntness, but who gives a sh** which was in the air "first?" One is for fun/games, and for a single-digit percentage of the community, a commercial enterprise. The other carries people or things from place to place as almost exclusively a commercial enterprise. One is significantly more deadly than the other.
Re-read what you said and tell me you're serious after doing so.
Pilots have to worry about birds. Birds aren't smart/stupid enough to chase or intentionally get in front of an aircraft. Only drone operators are dumb enough to do so.
Birds aren't arrogant enough to think they own any part of the airspace. When the US Airspace system was determined back in the 40's the concept of anything but aircraft overhead never came into thought. It took 15 years to develop the airspace system we now have, and drones haven't been plentiful for 15 months. It'll take a while to get the airspace re-sorted.
Prior to the Phantom, drone/uav/RC people were predominantly very dedicated hobbyist geeks that understood the fragility of the legal aspects of flying a device in classified airspace. The people I know were conservative, careful, and conscious. Never once did I hear the BS of "we were here first" or "Pilots need to be trained."
Pilots of a real airplane have enough to worry about when as low as 500.' It's dangerous enough to be that low. There are a lot of instruments to pay attention too, let alone other traffic in some areas/on approach, without having to worry about the microdot that can barely be seen amongst ground clutter, that may kill him/her vs some fu**wad that at worst, loses a $2000.00 piece of "gear."
It is *our* responsibility to learn the rules of the sky, NOT the pilot's, who has at least one hundred of hours of training, passed standardized tests, been check-rided, and given a license, to "learn about us." That pilot has more hours in the training than the vast majority of drone operators have in actual airtime.
Im saying rc fields should be on fight charts/maps and maned planes should keep some distence.