Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
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Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Can your ARF do this ? Click the link to the VIDEO below:
http://media.putfile.com/RCVideoCrossCountryFlying
This plane is scratch built, but I have been tempted to do the same thing with an ARF, I think the Hobby Lobby Telemaster ARF would do quite nicely with this type of flying. It is stable, large (90 some inches) and will lift a lot of weight, and is not to expensive . What do you all think, any other ARF's out there that might work good for this type of flying ?
JettPilot
http://media.putfile.com/RCVideoCrossCountryFlying
This plane is scratch built, but I have been tempted to do the same thing with an ARF, I think the Hobby Lobby Telemaster ARF would do quite nicely with this type of flying. It is stable, large (90 some inches) and will lift a lot of weight, and is not to expensive . What do you all think, any other ARF's out there that might work good for this type of flying ?
JettPilot
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Jettpilot, I think anything stable, like a Sig Kadet Senior, Telemaster of even a 60 size Cub would do the trick. Lotsa of mini-cam setups out there to download to small DC portable TV. If you can fly "behind the plane" on Simulator you should be able to do this....
I have a pusher drone type .60 size built for cameras, but haven't had the desire to do that ......yet. Cliff
I have a pusher drone type .60 size built for cameras, but haven't had the desire to do that ......yet. Cliff
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
A problem you may encounter, is when you go from line of sight flying, to either video or autonomous flight, the FAA likes to get involved. The FAA just grounded a very small autonomous UAV the Los Angeles Sheriff's Office was using because it was not being flown by line of sight.
The airplane in that video can see forward and cannot see 360 degrees around itself to see other aircraft or obstacles. The grounded UAV from LA was only meant to fly at an altitude of approx. 300 feet and weighed less than 5 pounds, but the FAA shut them down completely.
The last people I want snooping around my flying site is the FAA.
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/US_S...ice_Drone.html
The airplane in that video can see forward and cannot see 360 degrees around itself to see other aircraft or obstacles. The grounded UAV from LA was only meant to fly at an altitude of approx. 300 feet and weighed less than 5 pounds, but the FAA shut them down completely.
The last people I want snooping around my flying site is the FAA.
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/US_S...ice_Drone.html
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
ORIGINAL: CCRC1
The FAA just grounded a very small autonomous UAV the Los Angeles Sheriff's Office was using because it was not being flown by line of sight.
The FAA just grounded a very small autonomous UAV the Los Angeles Sheriff's Office was using because it was not being flown by line of sight.
The other issue is that the Sheriffs office is a large agency, once they start doing this stuff, over large cities, that changes everything, we are talking LOTS of 5 pounds planes in the air all the time.... A hobbyist like myself is not even in the same category.
And I got news for you, almost no airplane can see 360 degrees around itself. If you hold that as a standard, every airplane in the world would be grounded, except for maybe F-16's and P-51's.
JettPilot
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
You might get around it by using a "buddy box", and if you have control it is not flying autonomously, (not programed or hands off) With a Buddy Box, some one is in control at all times... Just a thought.....Of course FAA would be concerned and read regs thier way. Cliff
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
I am constantly flying the plane manually. It has an auto return feature, and can navigate its own course, but thats no fun [&o] It's a lot more fun wearing the goggles and flying it by the video
There are no FAA reg's that prohibit it yet As long as you dont do anything stupid or fly where you should not, its legal.... But im sure regulation is comming one day [:'(]
There are no FAA reg's that prohibit it yet As long as you dont do anything stupid or fly where you should not, its legal.... But im sure regulation is comming one day [:'(]
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
The primary complaint was that the UAV was flying autonomous and out of the line of site of a human pilot. An unmanned autonomous UAV poses a collision threat to other aircraft that may or may not be in the same airspace. It had nothing to do with the population in the immediate area. Here is the press release from AOPA who made the complaint to the FAA.
An autonomous UAV operated for commercial purposes is outside of the classification as a recreational R/C aircraft.
http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...060609uav.html
The point I was trying to make is that if you are experimenting with out of sight R/C flight, you are pushing the edges of the regulations. If a mishap occures, the FAA will come snooping at your flying site. And, they will come with the preconceived idea that you are a problem. No flying site needs that kind of heartburn and reputation.
An autonomous UAV operated for commercial purposes is outside of the classification as a recreational R/C aircraft.
http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/newsite...060609uav.html
The point I was trying to make is that if you are experimenting with out of sight R/C flight, you are pushing the edges of the regulations. If a mishap occures, the FAA will come snooping at your flying site. And, they will come with the preconceived idea that you are a problem. No flying site needs that kind of heartburn and reputation.
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Your point is/ was well taken, it is also against AMA rules to fly an autononmous aircraft... there has to be some control...and if I'm not mistaken, the line of sight is in reference to the pilot of the aircraft meaning your sight of the aircraft.. and you cannot use any aids to increase that line of sight ie: binoculars etc. Very intersting discussion though....Past article in AMA about trans-Atlantic R/C flight..it was NOT covered by AMA insurance because it was autononomous.. it was sanctioned by FAI I believe..... I'd rather the FAA watch gov't than watch me.....
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Thank god AMA does not have any authority or ability to write law. They can control what happens at their fields, and they can chose not to insure us, but they do NOT have force of law. AMA is run by a bunch of old control freaks that are paranoid of anything new or innovative. We all know the type I am talking about here, the old farts at the field that never fly but like to sit around and watch, and become self appointed policeman to try enforce every club rule to the point it ruins flying for everyone.
I am of the opinion that if you are not hurting anyone else, or doing something downright stupid, then no one should bother you. I can tell the AMA to jump in a lake when I am not at one of their fields
JetPilot
I am of the opinion that if you are not hurting anyone else, or doing something downright stupid, then no one should bother you. I can tell the AMA to jump in a lake when I am not at one of their fields
JetPilot
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Guys, just a reminder that this is the ARF forum. If you have AMA issues to discuss the AMA forum is the place to vent them.
#15
RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Going back to ARFs. I would very much prefer that a model serve a useful function. Some questions I have: Besides photography, is there any value in installing weather instruments on an R/C trainer such as the Hobbico Nexstar? Among some of the things I would like to measure are barometric pressure, air density, temperature, altitude, heading, air speed, and humidity.
I can see some value in air sampling at 600 to 800 feet, in addition to the photography possibilities. Sooner or later, some of us will want more than just stunts, I would like to see some scientific value in this hobby. Perhaps a trainer with auto-leveling features might make sense for UAV purposes (line of sight, by the way, and not autonomous), since they would not be used for stunts so much as carrying valuable measuring and sampling instruments.
There aught be more to R/C than just modeling.
NorfolkSouthern
I can see some value in air sampling at 600 to 800 feet, in addition to the photography possibilities. Sooner or later, some of us will want more than just stunts, I would like to see some scientific value in this hobby. Perhaps a trainer with auto-leveling features might make sense for UAV purposes (line of sight, by the way, and not autonomous), since they would not be used for stunts so much as carrying valuable measuring and sampling instruments.
There aught be more to R/C than just modeling.
NorfolkSouthern
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
Measuring of all those things are done a million times a day by the national weather service. You doing them personally is not going to anything to help anyone. Why this need to convince yourself that you "doing something" , I have no use for "busy work" just created for the purpose of making someone do something.
This hobby is all about fun, airplanes, and thrill of flying
Why do some people feel so guilty about having fun that they have to make a chore out of everything [:'(]
JettPilot
This hobby is all about fun, airplanes, and thrill of flying
Why do some people feel so guilty about having fun that they have to make a chore out of everything [:'(]
JettPilot
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
ORIGINAL: NorfolkSouthern
There aught be more to R/C than just modeling.
There aught be more to R/C than just modeling.
What I worry about is some FAA official looking at what jet pilot has come up with, and exclaiming, "See, I told you these model airplanes could pose an air traffic and security threat". "Here is a perfect example"! What could follow are regulations on weight, engine displacement, wingspan, construction material, altitude, flight locations and a whole host of other problems. Why poke the bear folks?
The FAA uses the AMA definitions as guidelines so even if you are not a member or not at an AMA site, they will defer to the AMA when deciding if the model is "Recreational". If you set up the airplane with instruments and it is being flown with the purpose of gathering data, its not recreational, but "scientific". And of course the FAA is going to want to stick its nose in and regulate its use somehow.
This topic of discussion has absolutely nothing to do with the AMA. It has to do with the Federal Aviation Administration and how it could impact our hobby as a whole if we are not careful and stay within the recreational arena. The FAA is already planning on regulating UAV's, and if we are not careful, we could get caught in the mix.
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
I may not be correct, but aren't all of those things available now? Auto leveling is available on the Nexstar trainer, and various gyro systems are on the market. Inflight data that can be down loaded has been advertised in at least one R/C magazine. 800' altitude...isn't that about 400' above AMA limit?
Leave the brainy stuff to the engineers and such... unless you are one. The main thought in this hobby is to have fun... But "do your own thing" Cliff
Leave the brainy stuff to the engineers and such... unless you are one. The main thought in this hobby is to have fun... But "do your own thing" Cliff
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RE: Can your ARF do this ??? Not easy but possible, check this out !!!!
I'll bet you don't step on cracks in the sidewalk or walk under ladders..... If you stay in the parameters set forth by the AMA you will not be in conflict with the almighty FAA........ Do not fly ANY model aircraft beyond YOUR unaided line of sight. No autononomous flight means that the aircraft has to have some ground control, not a pre-programed flight plan that allows it to fly alone. There is a fellow in Fla. that has been flying his plane using an on board camera and he watching a monitor, for at least two years with NOT ONE problem with either the AMA or the FAA.....Check out RC Report Magazine page 99 orf the August issue. Why dream up problems that don't exist?? Just relax and have fun,,your shadow won't bite....Cliff 'nuf said.