Saw this on the news this morning. Would love to see their request for authorization to fly over crowds. I assume the NYPD is getting the required authorizations from the FAA?
get ready for some of them to be sht at lol target pratice , I personally think its a bad ideaThey are hanging the drone from wires. Not only that, below the area where the drone will be hanging, they have it closed off so no one can stand under the drone.
The idea is to condition people to get used to seeing drones hanging around.
Are you able to see publicly if someone requested or was granted access to a restricted area?
Thank you
Who cares guys mind all your Business, it’s Police business and who cares.Yes - but they are probably working under a COA rather than Part 107, so it's not going to be publicly available, at least without a FOI request.
Why does Drone hobbiest worry so much about what Police Drones are doing???? Please....who cares!!!No - those are not standard waivers or authorizations under the Part 107 system. Permission to fly in restricted/special use airspace is granted by the controlling agency.
I can see the article and yet "tethered to the ground" as I think about it does not make sense. Too much tension on the tether cord changes aerodynamics and yanks the drone. Too little tension or a sudden descent could cause the cord to tangle in the props. Plus the longer the tether altitude, the longer the theoretical crash range diameter needs to be cordoned off from people.
Maybe someone can get to the bottom of this with some facts.
Who cares guys mind all your Business, it’s Police business and who cares.
Why does Drone hobbiest worry so much about what Police Drones are doing???? Please....who cares!!!
As a commercial drone pilot I earn a living using my drone. On several occasions I've submitted waiver/authorization request to the FAA to briefly fly over crowds during festivels, street fairs, etc. These were part of my proposal responding to RFQ's from various municipalities that want the event filmed. All were promptly denied by the FAA. I included significant safety precautions including limiting the time over crowds to only transiting from one side of the event to the other with the majority of the time the drone would remain on the perimeter. The reason for my post was to hopefully get some ideas on what type of justification would result in an approval. Sorry if this upset someone! BTW I'm not a hobbiest.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.