Helicopters should be flown above 1,000 feet over congested areas : FAA Except when necessary for takeoff or landing, no person may operate an aircraft below the following altitudes: Over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over any open-air assembly of persons, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 feet of the aircraft. But, the helicopter's increased use by law enforcement and emergency medical service agencies requires added flexibility. I get it, it was a Military helo on a mission of protection so it was within FAA guidelines, maybe. But the military aircraft will get the benefit of the doubt. Drone altitude ceilings are 400 feet. (or 400 feet above a structure if it is within 4oo feet of the structure.
Guys if you're going to fly your drone, follow the regulations. 500 ft is clearly above the legal height. And I have a very hard time believing that there wasn't a tfr during a U.N. meeting. And I would also think that the drone pilot was in unauthorized air space even if he were at the permitted 400 feet without the U. N. Meeting
More Helicopters and aeroplanes crash through the malfunction of the craft itself than any other reason, Kobe Bryant,Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, Colin Mcrae are just a few well known people to die in helicopters alone. Planes crash too! So everyone needs to stop scare mongering and blaming drones for disasters when there there hasn't been one caused by one.
Hahaha the only drone that can take out a manned aircraft is a military drone equipped with weapons that are able to take out an aircraft 😂 but yet a drone could be catastrophic you fools 🤪
Even a very small (less than 100 grams) UAV is enough to make potentially catastrophic damage to an aircraft, depending on the point of contact and the speeds involved. I can kill you with a 20g bullet faster than with a 1kg baseball bat. That's just plain sime classic newtonian physics
If that little plastic drone managed to actually hurt somebody in a helicopter that would be some trippy shit
Helicopters should be flown above 1,000 feet over congested areas : FAA Except when necessary for takeoff or landing, no person may operate an aircraft below the
following altitudes: Over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over
any open-air assembly of persons, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle
within a horizontal radius of 2,000 feet of the aircraft.
But, the
helicopter's increased use by law enforcement and emergency medical service agencies requires added flexibility.
I get it, it was a Military helo on a mission of protection so it was within FAA guidelines, maybe. But the military aircraft will get the benefit of the doubt. Drone altitude ceilings are 400 feet. (or 400 feet above a structure if it is within 4oo feet of the structure.
Must be North Korean air force.
Aerohk I
Caisey Neistat
Stainly Stewart or jesse wellens
Guys if you're going to fly your drone, follow the regulations. 500 ft is clearly above the legal height. And I have a very hard time believing that there wasn't a tfr during a U.N. meeting. And I would also think that the drone pilot was in unauthorized air space even if he were at the permitted 400 feet without the U. N. Meeting
More Helicopters and aeroplanes crash through the malfunction of the craft itself than any other reason, Kobe Bryant,Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, Colin Mcrae are just a few well known people to die in helicopters alone. Planes crash too! So everyone needs to stop scare mongering and blaming drones for disasters when there there hasn't been one caused by one.
North Korean drones vs us Air Force lol
Hahaha the only drone that can take out a manned aircraft is a military drone equipped with weapons that are able to take out an aircraft 😂 but yet a drone could be catastrophic you fools 🤪
Even a very small (less than 100 grams) UAV is enough to make potentially catastrophic damage to an aircraft, depending on the point of contact and the speeds involved. I can kill you with a 20g bullet faster than with a 1kg baseball bat. That's just plain sime classic newtonian physics
Eighth
First