Whenever a drone is more than about 100 feet away from the operator there is not enough depth perception for the pilot to tell if the drone is above, below, closer or further away from another aircraft. So much for the justification for the VLOS rule.
If you can't make that judgement at 100ft then you really shouldn't be flying - seriously flawed argument
The three dimensional air space is so large that in reality the odds of a collision between a Phantom drone and a manned aircraft are exceedingly, vanishingly small, even if not zero. I'm tired of the hysterical hype about the "danger" of drones hitting other aircraft. The repeated negative media hype turns public opinion against drones far in excess of any realistic justification.
Another flawed argument - Yes, it is very large when you consider the whole 3D airspace but we aren't considering the 'whole' 3D airspace when we talk of remote controlled aircraft of any type are we? In fact we are talking about a very small percentage of the available airspace. Let's assume that the upper limit of '3D Airspace' is 35,000 ft - 99.9% Phantoms are incapable of flying above 1650ft so any possible collision only occurs in a maximum of less than 5% of available space. Most Phantoms are flown below 500' or 1.4% of the massive 3D space you speak of. Let's also make the assumption that as 71% of the earth's surface is water most of that (coastal regions aside) isn't going to have Phantoms flying over it due to range limitations so we can reduce that 1.4% down to about 0.3% - so, if all the small drones are flying in 0.3% of the worlds airspace (generous over exaggeration when you consider the earth's geography and climate) that significantly increases the chance of collisions. Now factor in that the most likely time for a collision is during take off and landing you can further reduce that airspace figure by another 99% (this generously assumes that 1% of the world's surface is covered in airstrips - we are now down to below 0.04% of all available airspace where 100% of the air traffic has to share the space and where collisions are most likely to take place

Now what about the heli pilots' duty to continuously scan for other aircraft in the vicinity? Did the heli pilots in this incident see the drone before the strike or not? We haven't been told. All of the negative attention is on the drone pilot.
If you'd bothered to read the report before sharing your 'wisdom' with us you could have skipped this paragraph
I can see it from both sides
You clearly have trouble seeing it from any side other than your own blinkered view
I am a licensed private pilot and fly P4 and P4A+ drones as well.
Why is it, whenever I see those words they are almost always at the end of a poorly thought out rant? Maybe if licenced pilots were made to start their posts wih that line it could save the rest of us having to read a lot of rubbish

Last edited: