- Joined
- Sep 15, 2015
- Messages
- 122
- Reaction score
- 40
- Age
- 49
Rotorblades thank you for the concise explanation. I agree 100% but, I suck at explaining myself.Wow, it's great to see a bunch of passionate people and interesting to hear both sides of the coin, those for and against registration.
As a helicopter pilot I want to know that when I'm flying, I'm not going to smash into a drone because someone wants to get up close and personal to my aircraft. Or because they just don't realize that I can fly at any altitude I want (10ft-10000ft). Aeroplanes have to be at least 1000ft unless taking off or landing.
It was mentioned that there has been zero major accidents and zero fatalities, while this is true at the moment I guarantee its only a matter of time before its history and I sure don't want to be the first or ever part of it. That way of looking at it is why the aviation industry is so fiercely regulated, because that was the mentality until a catastrophic accident killed lots of people. Why wait for that when we can learn from our previous mistakes and be proactive.
The aviation industry is built around a safety first environment and I believe the same should be for drone operators. A registration system would go towards accountability and therefore safety. I also think that an operators license or at the very least awareness training should be conducted and this shouldn't be a one off it should be annually or biennially. Rules and regs change and we forget things so it's always good to brush up on your knowledge.
You guys are effectively operating in our environment and we welcome you just as long as we can make it as safe and possible but we need your help for that. Drones are awesome machines and aren't going away any time soon but we should be moving to make it safer.
Are there any apps to say where you're flying?
"You guys are effectively operating in our environment " : for me, this is the crux. This is not some frontier of new airspace, this is where professional people have developed a highly sophisticated and safe environment to do something completely unnatural. Because they actually are up there, in the thing, and could fall to their death, I think as drone pilots we must defer to them on all things safety. it's not like they aren't consulting and involving the UAS industry in the regulatory development process.
I live in Australia (we have strict but fair rules in place now), and use ozrunways (OzRunways) for info on nearby airfields and NOTAMS. No good outside Australia though

neX
