K5DH wrote:
DISCLAIMER: I don't know how true this is, so please take it as a "rumour" (unless it can be substantiated, and please do so if you can!). You guys all know me, and you know I'm not the type to go around spreading gossip if it doesn't sound plausible.
A co-worker of mine said he saw a story on a Dallas-area TV news broadcast a couple of weeks ago in which the crew of a Virgin Airlines Airbus was landing at Dallas Love Field and encountered a "drone" (probably a big quad-copter) directly in their flight path, very close to the airport. The "drone" apparently got out of the jet's way and no harm came to anyone. The Virgin crew reported the incident and the FAA was going to investigate.
Again, this is a "rumour" that I got from a co-worker. I haven't bothered to research it (probably because finding out it was true will make my blood pressure go even higher than it usually is). I was on a cruise ship in the Caribbean at the time, and I had no access to Dallas-area TV broadcasts. Our TV on the ship only got Miami broadcasts via satellite, and they were totally consumed with the terrible goings-on in Baltimore that week.
If this incident didn't really happen, well, it's probably just a matter of time. I shudder at the possibilities.
I was IN that very airspace that day doing aerial photography. I have told ATC once in the last three months about a possible drone sighting, but couldn't swing my camera fast enough to take a picture of it. They are VERY hard to spot and blend in a lot better than a bird does with an industrial background.
People need to realize that this a very real threat and someone IS going to get hurt. I think the real key is people need to realize that the drone guys are trying very hard to justify their "rights" while endangering other people, and honestly, there isn't much a drone can do that actually can be done efficiently - sometimes more efficiently by a manned aircraft that can see and avoid other manned aircraft and carries a transponder and other collision avoidance equipment. Some of our "drone" friends / competitors are telling customers how much cheaper their photos are when in reality we can shoot more in a day than a drone can, can stay aloft longer, and can give better quality pictures for the same price or less. The drones are the darlings right now, but they really aren't what their operators are making them out to be.
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Aerial Photographer with
Red Wing Aerial Photography currently based at KRBD and tailwheel CFI.
Websites:
Texas Tailwheel Flight Training,
DoolittleRaid.com and
Lbirds.com.
The horse is prepared against the day of battle: but safety is of the LORD. - Prov. 21:31
- Train, Practice, Trust.