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Part ufo hustler, part legit
Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder. If flown as a hobby, no transponder required (but most of newish ones already have it anyway). The hobby pilots are required to pass so-called TRUST cert exam (easy and costs something like $5), commercial must pass FAA Part 107 cert (kinda hard and almost $200). Both are required to post their lic# on the aircraft.
Can't go higher than 400 ft AGL (with few exceptions), can't go beyond line of sight and farther than 3 miles.
I don't see this angle, honestly: the shit is already regulated AF.
Drones weighting more than 0.55 lbs are already regulated and registered by FAA. If flown for hire they must have a transponder.
RWSGFY says
The same Mavic can be either commercial or amateur depending on how it's used. If you film your sister's wedding for free with it - it's amateur, if you film some house for a Realtard and being paid for it - it becomes commercial.
Right. Like that can be enforced as things are now. Not.
This guy did attract attention to himself:
RWSGFY says
This guy did attract attention to himself:
New Jersey isn't a military base. 99.9% of America's landmass isn't.
A weapon often described as an "anti-drone rifle" or "anti-drone gun" is a battery-powered electromagnetic pulse weapon held to an operator's shoulder, pointed at a flying target in a way similar to a rifle, and operated. While not a rifle or gun, it is so nicknamed as it is handled in the same way as a personal rifle. The device emits separate electromagnetic pulses to suppress navigation and transmission channels used to operate an aerial drone, terminating the drone's contact with its operator; the out-of-control drone then crashes.
A Pischal-Pro anti-drone rifle, featured at the Dubai Airshow, 2019
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed-energy_weapon
A weapon often described as an "anti-drone rifle" or "anti-drone gun" is a battery-powered electromagnetic pulse weapon held to an operator's shoulder, pointed at a flying target in a way similar to a rifle, and operated. While not a rifle or gun, it is so nicknamed as it is handled in the same way as a personal rifle. The device emits separate electromagnetic pulses to suppress navigation and transmission channels used to operate an aerial drone, terminating the drone's contact with its operator; the out-of-control drone then crashes.
A Pischal-Pro anti-drone rifle, featured at the Dubai Airshow, 2019
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...Eat your heart out, Orsen Welles!