Not to nitpick, but there's only one engine in a Cessna. That's not exactly multiple redundant, but I get your point. Manned private craft have gone down, craft that have the potential to do way more damage than a 3lb drone falling. I think that's day and night comparison for risk, compared to a 3000lb Cessna 182, with one motor. Fortunately the pilot can hopefully glide if he's the control surface are working. Hopefully he can find a low risk landing/crash site
Only one engine but the engine is designed with multiple levels of redundancy (dual magnetos etc). Yes you're def nitpicking.
Thank you for the details of CFR107, I've never read that before, but I passes my test

. However regarding this statement:
With vision that is unaided by any device other than corrective lenses. This says my "vision" cannot be aided. It doesn't say I can't use my navigation system to gain information about my craft. Wouldn't that be analogous to a pilot not using his instruments? That makes no sense.
It says "
With vision that is unaided by any device other than corrective lenses". Would your "navigation system" (
aka tablet/phone) not fall under the "any device" category? We have to be able to "Fly the aircraft" without all the bells & whistles. What happens if you're flying "out there" and the aircraft is a mere dot (
you can't determine orientation) and you notice a manned aircraft inbound at a high rate of speed heading directly at your sUAS. You look down at your "display device" and you have a black screen? The device has malfunctioned and in the worst possible time/situation. The regs are written in such a way to take "grey area" out of the equation and pretty much eliminates any "creative loopholes".
Wouldn't that be analogous to a pilot not using his instruments? That makes no sense.
When we learn to fly Manned Aircraft we learn to fly the aircraft before we even start to learn about the cool widgets and gadgets. We are always planning and practicing for when those instruments quit working
and they DO! My very first flight after getting my Pilot's License ( I was literally flying home from a full day of getting my Check Ride in another state) I lost all cabin electrical components and had to fly at night, across the mountains to AVL, with a flashlight and a compass with the most basic (back up) instruments. Our EYES are our backup navigation system when flying sUAS which is 1/2 of the reason why they have such a strict requirement of VLOS. The other half is being able to perform See & Avoid.
Aviation is about being able to
Fly The Aircraft in just about any scenario and in a way that is as safe as is possible and does NOT endanger aircraft or people on the ground.
It's all right there in the regs and they leave little room for "
creative interpretation".
Not to nitpick, but there's only one engine in a Cessna. That's not exactly multiple redundant, but I get your point. Manned private craft have gone down, craft that have the potential to do way more damage than a 3lb drone falling. I think that's day and night comparison for risk, compared to a 3000lb Cessna 182, with one motor. Fortunately the pilot can hopefully glide if he's the control surface are working. Hopefully he can find a low risk landing/crash site
Only one engine but the engine is designed with multiple levels of redundancy (dual magnetos etc). Yes you're def nitpicking.
Thank you for the details of CFR107, I've never read that before, but I passes my test

. However regarding this statement:
With vision that is unaided by any device other than corrective lenses. This says my "vision" cannot be aided. It doesn't say I can't use my navigation system to gain information about my craft. Wouldn't that be analogous to a pilot not using his instruments? That makes no sense.
It says "
With vision that is unaided by any device other than corrective lenses". Would your "navigation system" (
aka tablet/phone) not fall under the "any device" category? We have to be able to "Fly the aircraft" without all the bells & whistles. What happens if you're flying "out there" and the aircraft is a mere dot (
you can't determine orientation) and you notice a manned aircraft inbound at a high rate of speed heading directly at your sUAS. You look down at your "display device" and you have a black screen? The device has malfunctioned and in the worst possible time/situation. The regs are written in such a way to take "grey area" out of the equation and pretty much eliminates any "creative loopholes".
Wouldn't that be analogous to a pilot not using his instruments? That makes no sense.
When we learn to fly Manned Aircraft we learn to fly the aircraft before we even start to learn about the cool widgets and gadgets. We are always planning and practicing for when those instruments quit working
and they DO! My very first flight after getting my Pilot's License ( I was literally flying home from a full day of getting my Check Ride in another state) I lost all cabin electrical components and had to fly at night, across the mountains to AVL, with a flashlight and a compass with the most basic (back up) instruments. Our EYES are our backup navigation system when flying sUAS which is 1/2 of the reason why they have such a strict requirement of VLOS. The other half is being able to perform See & Avoid.
Aviation is about being able to
Fly The Aircraft in just about any scenario and in a way that is as safe as is possible and does NOT endanger aircraft or people on the ground.
It's all right there in the regs and they leave little room
I find this discussion interesting, but I'm guessing 80% of the pilots in this forum fly beyond VLOS, often.
80%? I think your number is a little low LOL. I'd say it's much higher and across the industry as a whole.
Otherwise who needs Lightbridge?
Exactly! This is easy when you're flying a WiFi only aircraft that can only go a few hundred feet (up or out) before losing signal but when a factory aircraft can go a couple of miles you know everyone is going to "push it" just for the excitement of it. I'd say anyone with a modern sUAS that is capable of 3000' (
horizontal) distance who has been flying more than a few weeks has flown well beyond "legal" VLOS and probably do so often.