More so, we can thank Bill Clinton for not sending in the available, and offered, Pakistani armor forces, as well as our own.
JIMO I would think the chances are slim rob but you never know with the ocean . Some times it will give back what it takes and sometimes not .What do you guys think are the chances that the Phantom washes up on shore? Given it dropped at about 150-200 yards out into pretty deep water?
The tide is rough right now, and may have strong currents.
JIMO I would think the chances are slim rob but you never know with the ocean . Some times it will give back what it takes and sometimes not .
If you had your # on it and someone was to walk up on it that would be nice !
Funny thing happened on my second last flight, the other night.
When I landed and had a look at the Phantom, while letting her cool down a few minutes before inserting a fresh battery. I noticed some stains on two of the rotor blades, out near their tips. Mostly on the underside of those two blades. It was definitely blood, but I have no idea what was hit or where it happened? Thankfully, what ever it was, didn't upset the Phantom 3 from continuing on, in her "Mission"!!
I had lost sight of her, and had to rely on the map, which thankfully showed me the route she had flown, and direction of travel. I turned it around and brought her back to me... Wow that gave me a rush, to the cerebral cortex.
I left the blood stains on, if only for good luck. To chase away any flight demons or gremlins...
RedHotPoker
Blackhawk, you sir are a stud. Your life has been very adventurous to say the least. Looks like I just need to come straight to you for all the right answers!
Sure in the sense that I saw activity at the props (perhaps a bird strike based on others opinion). What I saw looked like the prop simply breaking up or shattering. Then an instant death spiral.Sorry for your loss.
If it was that far away can you be sure it was a prop and not a motor failure?
Now don't get carried away with your bad self.
I ONLY answer those topics I have experience with. There are MANY topics here I've read, but not bothered to place input in since I haven't the experience to do so.
I'm just expressing my personal observations in a given water area. If you weren't in the Gulf, things could be entirely different. Hell, even different spectrums of Gulf water can produce very different results. I'm speaking about my experiences from the far East area of Panama City, perhaps 20 miles East of the city, to roughly 30 miles West of Destin, at my furthest excursion.
I've done this purely out of my desire to keep myself busy and, to help my fellow man. So I have no dog in this hunt.
I wish you the very best of luck in your recovery efforts. However, if the craft had no flotation device(s) attached to it, I would call it a loss and instead, spend such monies in acquiring a new craft rather than attempting to retrieve this one.
Its interesting you had this happen as I just had the same thing although I was in visible range flying over a small stream. I didn't see any action but my drone made a sudden weird motion like it lost GPS momentarily. I brought it in as I was worried maybe there was interference. When it landed there was the slightest trickle of blood on one of the props. There was no other damage but I did not see any bird come that close (although there were many in the area). Maybe the P3 is more bird resilient than previous models.
After flying two batteries tonight, all four blades now have what appears to be small splatters of red blood. It couldn't be insects, and when ever birds were near by, I took the Phantom 3. up well above their flight ceiling, so I'm stumped as to what I sliced through.
If anyone has any ideas or thoughts, I would sure like to hear about them.
RedHotPoker
Much agreed, but the blood was too red for insect blood (unless it was some very big mosquitoes). You did remind me though to break out the canned air and give it a good once over.After flying two batteries tonight, all four blades now have what appears to be small splatters of red blood. It couldn't be insects, and when ever birds were near by, I took the Phantom 3. up well above their flight ceiling, so I'm stumped as to what I sliced through.
If anyone has any ideas or thoughts, I would sure like to hear about them. It's a mystery to me, so far. A bird would drop the Phantom in its tracks, for sure. Even a tiny hummingbird would make one heck of a mess.
RedHotPoker
Funny thing happened on my second last flight, the other night.
When I landed and had a look at the Phantom, while letting her cool down a few minutes before inserting a fresh battery. I noticed some stains on two of the rotor blades, out near their tips. Mostly on the underside of those two blades. It was definitely blood, but I have no idea what was hit or where it happened? Thankfully, what ever it was, didn't upset the Phantom 3 from continuing on, in her "Mission"!!
I had lost sight of her, and had to rely on the map, which thankfully showed me the route she had flown, and direction of travel. I turned it around and brought her back to me... Wow that gave me a rush, to the cerebral cortex.
I left the blood stains on, if only for good luck. To chase away any flight demons or gremlins...
RedHotPoker
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.