What the ( Mod Removed ) is wrong with Transport Canada ?Much thanks for your reply....
Believe it or not, this question was on the Transport Canada Advanced Drone Operator's Certificate exam.
One of the 5 or 6 obscure and odd questions that really have no relevance to the safe and responsible flying of your Phantom.
I'm sure these questions are included to restrict the number of people passing the exam.
Even pilots with years of flight experience are finding this exam difficult.
We all should remember this famous quote:
"The only time you fail is the last time you try."![]()
I wrote technical exams years ago. Test questions like that are usually designed to see if you have a ballpark idea of how something works or if you have an appreciation for typical operation or safety ... in this case, do the motors/props spin at 24/440/1,560/ or 10,000 rpm? Note how the answers are about times ten from each other. The calculation has virtually nothing to do with it. Just to see if you understand the props are spinning really fast (10,000 vs 1,000 rpm) and the props could hurt you or someone else. Still, an awkward way to test that tidbit of knowledge. Why not just ask, "What's the average rpm of the props on a typical drone when energized or in flight?" with the same exact anwers given. We're mostly hobby pilots of a consumer drone; few of us are engineers (nor should that be required). Even from an engineering standpoint, the KV vs. rpm ratio is pointless on a motor you have no ability or reason to change. To my Canadian friends ... sorry about that (we're probably next).
Unfortunately, that information is not in any UAS manual I have read, unless I'm going blind. I became curious some time ago and searched user manuals on all Phantoms, Inspires and M600. If anyone has the answer and source, I'd love to see it.This question was clearly included as a test to see how many of us know our craft, to see if we know the actual rpm of our props and clearly there's only one logical answer, and correct one.
They are seeing how many of us actually know enough about our aircraft to properly maintain them safe to fly.
however, the real correct thing here would be for Transport Canada to have another look at these exam questions and ultimately revise the questions to better reflect what we are all after here.
That being, to educate and produce(through certification) drone pilots who know the rules and have been schooled in the responsibilities attached to the safe operation of your Phantom.
I feel this is Transport Canada's first 'go around' with this and they will be hearing the constructive criticism from people who have been flying drones for years and cannot see the relevance to some of the questions being asked.
And there are 'trick questions' as well.
Example:
'What is the recommended amount of time a pilot should take between donating blood and resuming flying duties?"
A. 24 hours.
B. 12 hours.
C. 48 hours.
D. 72 hours.
The Transport Canada and FAA rule is 24 hours.
There is a recommendation a pilot should take 48 hours between donating blood and resuming flight duties.
So, for this exam, Transport Canada is looking for the 'recommended' time period......
NOT its own stated rule!
Spin a 400KV motor at 400rpm and you should see 1V on a connected meter (the measured voltage will actually be root2/2 of the DC equivalent). This is because the KV really tells us what the back EMF of the motor is.
So the real answer is the voltage applied to the motor doesn’t determine the RPM. RPM is a function of line frequency and number of poles.
Could you explain how knowing my motors spin at 10,500 rpm versus 12,000 rpm or 9,000 makes me a safer pilot?This inquiry was obviously included as a test to perceive what number of us know our specialty, to check whether we know the real rpm of our props and unmistakably there's solitary one intelligent answer, and right one.
They are perceiving what number of us really think enough about our flying machine to appropriately keep up them safe to fly.
Good question.... it seems @mina3000 has deleted their post- I’m curious also to understand what they thought the correct answer was.Could you explain how knowing my motors spin at 10,500 rpm versus 12,000 rpm or 9,000 makes me a safer pilot?
Do you believe that if this bit of info was important to safe flying it should be included in the manual by the manufacturer?
This question was clearly included as a test to see how many of us know our craft, to see if we know the actual rpm of our props and clearly there's only one logical answer, and correct one.
They are seeing how many of us actually know enough about our aircraft to properly maintain them safe to fly.
Could you explain how knowing my motors spin at 10,500 rpm versus 12,000 rpm or 9,000 makes me a safer pilot?
I completely agree, as I stated, I dont believe the question is relevant to the actual knowledge that is required for hobbyist flying, and nor would answering that question wrong likely cause anyone to fail the test. I believe it's more "survey" based to provide info back about just how much we actually do know above and beyond the minimum. I have no issue at all with that question.That's all fine and understandable .... at a professional or commercial level. Recreational boat owners (here at least) are required to show a level of understanding of the rules governing use of the water and basic operational ability. They're not questioned on "displacement mechanics" however. By extension it's a bit over the top for a recreational R.P.A. pilot to need this level of knowledge IMO.
Regards
Ari
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