Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend.

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   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #101  
Most of you understand the term "range fan," and get the point. We are firing into a hill, with a proper backstop, on our own property, just to button up that [off] topic. My primary concern was ricochets from the many rocks here. Many, many rocks. It is our best crop. The first search project will probably be to help some neighbors find an old graveyard on their property: probably have to wait for the leaves to drop, though. I'm just about to "pull the trigger" :)laughing:) on a DFI Phantom 3 Advanced with a spare battery? 1. Not getting the 4K because the datalink is speced for 1080p. Will I miss 4K? 2. I'm assuming a second battery is just about essential. 3. Amazon is a bit cheaper than some of the online camera places that sell them. Any reason to buy elsewhere? DFI support is notorious.
Coincidentally I just bought a Phantom 3 Advanced, extra battery and a set of blade guards. After researching, I couldn't really justify the additional $250 for the 4K camera. Since I don't have a 4K TV and no plans to get one soon and I don't plan to use it professionally I didn't see where I would benefit. Mine arrives today or tomorrow I think. Looking forward to pissing off the neighbors... Just kidding.
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #102  
30.06 maximum range is roughly a mile.


More like 3 1/3 miles with the heavy bullet military cartridge. Maybe longer with some of the newer high ballistic coefficient bullets.

Bruce



From:
https://books.google.com/books?id=yESNUKSg5aMC&pg=PA25

3006range.jpg
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #103  
Interesting article.
Dispute Emerges Over Drone Shot Down By Kentucky Man : The Two-Way : NPR

A Kentucky homeowner is arrested for shooting down a civilian drone he said was invading his family's privacy. The drone's owner insists that he did nothing wrong, in the latest case that highlights both confusion and concerns over the legal use of drones.

William Meredith, 47, of Bullitt County, Ky., was arrested after he used his shotgun to bring down a drone that he said hovered above his property in Hillview, a suburb of Louisville.

"Sunday afternoon, the kids my girls were out on the back deck, and the neighbors were out in their yard," Meredith tells local TV news station WDRB. "And they come in and said, 'Dad, there's a drone out here, flying over everybody's yard.'"

Meredith grabbed his shotgun and went out to watch the drone, which he says was hovering over a neighbor's property.

"Within a minute or so, here it came," he said. "It was hovering overtop of my property, and I shot it out of the sky."

Police were called to the scene; Meredith now faces felony charges of wanton endangerment and criminal mischief, with a court date set for September.

The drone's owner, David Boggs, says the drone wasn't hovering low over anyone's property, showing flight tracking data to local media that indicates an altitude of more than 250 feet. And he says he wasn't trying to invade anyone's privacy.

"No. 1, I was having fun with my friends and family," Boggs tells WDRB, adding that he was trying out the drone he had only recently bought. He said he was trying to film the house of a friend who lives in the area but was visiting Las Vegas.

"Now the drone is getting a bad name because the Drone slayer made a bad decision and went skeet shooting in a neighborhood," Boggs told local WHAS Channel 11.

The drone-downing comes months after Oklahoma lawmakers considered a bill that would allow homeowners to shoot down a drone that's flying over their property. A Colorado town even debated issuing hunting licenses for drones, before the Federal Aviation Administration stepped in.

The Kentucky case is similar to one from last September, when a New Jersey man was arrested on charges of using a weapon unlawfully and criminal mischief. The man allegedly used a shotgun to blast a drone that was flying over his house.

Such cases have provoked a wide range of responses from those who want to protect the increased use of drones for personal and commercial use, and from those who are uncomfortable with HD camera-equipped aircraft buzzing around.

Taking pictures in a public place is one thing. My backyard is not a public place. Keep the toys in their own yard. I bought my place for the quite. Not to have someone decided their toys should be allowed to trespass on other peoples property.

The drone is no different than if I went for a walk through my neighbors backyard taking pictures of his wife and daughter sunbathing in their fenced backyard. Also, you are showing the world what is in my yard and what I am doing.

One persons idea of fun does not trump others privacy rights at six feet or 250 feet.
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #106  
Curious... how do you know?

There's been multiple explanations regarding the origin of this video posted-- all of which (like the link I posted) seem believable IMO.
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #107  
Awesome video! I just got my first drone (Syma X8C) that my wife found at a garage sale for $25. I had been wanting one for a while but didn't want to spend the $$$. It's a great, cheap, learning quad until I can get the hang of it. I hope to get some good use out of it, learn a lot, and maybe upgrade in a year or two so I can take some good quality video of our land and some of my family member's land. I won't post any of my video so far, since it's so crappy! :)
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #108  
The idea of using drones to kill was first written about in Robert Gibson's novel "Neuromancer," in 1984. He also used the word "Cyberspace."
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #109  
There's been multiple explanations regarding the origin of this video posted-- all of which (like the link I posted) seem believable IMO.
Jymbee, you may be right about the authenticity of this particular one... I don't know, but these type of armed quads exist in military circles and the company I am with supplies hardware to companies that build prototypes of this kind of thing. Seen them myself. I will again post a real pic of an operational armed quad. I wish I could post some other 'stuff' but I would like to keep my day job!

IMG_6001.jpg

One of the cool features now in testing are the firing of large capture nets from Quads for military/law enforcement.
 
   / Drone view of the neighborhood from last weekend. #110  
Taking pictures in a public place is one thing. ....

And that's the current dilemma... "public place" hasn't been defined very well as it pertains to drone usage and photography/videography. Some people get furious if you stand in the road and take a picture of their house, or take a picture on a sidewalk and they are in it. Things like that have been defined many times over the years as public places. Not so much with overhead yet, but I bet its coming to court sooner than later.
 
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