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"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
hlink.net... "Tony Cox" wrote in message nk.net... And in case of mechanical failure when the plane has to descend into the VFR altitudes? Don't you think the rest of us are entitled to be "seen-and-avoided"? A mechanical failure would make it an aircraft in distress. An aircraft in distress has the right-of-way over all other air traffic. Indeed. But it makes it *more dangerous*, which is why Larry's post is relevant, even if UAV's are supposedly confined to Class A airspace. |
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![]() "Tony Cox" wrote in message nk.net... Indeed. But it makes it *more dangerous*, which is why Larry's post is relevant, even if UAV's are supposedly confined to Class A airspace. It makes it *more dangerous* only in the sense that more traffic makes flying more dangerous. Any aircraft can have a mechanical failure that affects it's ability to maintain altitude and/or maneuver. It's not *more dangerous* simply because it's a UAV. |
#3
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message hlink.net... "Tony Cox" wrote in message nk.net... And in case of mechanical failure when the plane has to descend into the VFR altitudes? Don't you think the rest of us are entitled to be "seen-and-avoided"? A mechanical failure would make it an aircraft in distress. An aircraft in distress has the right-of-way over all other air traffic. A lot of good that will do you when the military doesn't inform civilian authorities and thus you have no idea an unmanned drone is rapidly descending on you. There is no way unmanned aircraft can mix with all others and not have some reduction in safety. The questions are just how much of a reduction, what can be done to mitigate the danger, and regulations which do not penalize GA pilots for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. I imagine these UAVs will be common in the future, maybe even extending to pilot-less GA and commercial aircraft. How much this industry grows will in some part be determined by it's safety record. A few bad incidents will slow or stop progress in this direction so I would hope the companies involved have the foresight and intelligence to do the proper engineering and risk analysis to keep incidents from happening. I also hope their solution to assuring safety is not a legislative one where they manage to convince Washington to prohibit GA aircraft from operating anywhere near one of these things. |
#4
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![]() "Peter Gottlieb" wrote in message . net... A lot of good that will do you when the military doesn't inform civilian authorities and thus you have no idea an unmanned drone is rapidly descending on you. They're not drones. There is no way unmanned aircraft can mix with all others and not have some reduction in safety. The questions are just how much of a reduction, what can be done to mitigate the danger, and regulations which do not penalize GA pilots for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. If operations are confined to Restricted Areas and Class A airspace they're not mixing with all others. |
#5
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A mechanical failure would make it an aircraft in distress. An aircraft
in distress has the right-of-way over all other air traffic. Under the existing definition, sure--but this definition presupposes that such an aircraft has human occupants. To my thinking, unmanned hardware can't exactly experience "distress"; therefore, right-of-way shouldn't be an absolute in this instance. Manned air traffic should never be jeopardized by unmanned aircraft, irrespective of any malfunction such hardware may experience. "Safety" always pertains to the human element, never machinery. A related thought: rockets always have a human-controlled self-destruct capability to protect lives and property on the ground should the vehicle experience a loss of control. Maybe UAVs should have this cabability too. |
#6
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message link.net... "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... How does the military's use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle intend to comply with the Part 91 See-And-Avoid mandate? Will there be new Restricted Areas imposed along the border, or will the UAVs be flown in Positive Control Airspace? Did you read the item before posting your message? There is no altitude reference outside of Class A airspace, so presumably see-and-avoid is not an issue. Yeah, they've got to climb through Class E airspace to get to Class A, but I'd assume that'll be done in a restricted area. They are not always flown in restricted areas. This test facility is not in a restricted area. http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Pho...03-0078-1.html ....and as copied from: http://www.defense-aerospace.com/cgi...9&modele=jdc_1 "Altair is expected to be the first UAV to meet Federal Aviation Administration requirements to operate from conventional airports, with piloted aircraft, in the national airspace. In addition to triple-redundant avionics, Altair is configured with a fault-tolerant, dual-architecture flight control system. The UAV will be equipped with an automated collision-avoidance system and an air traffic control voice relay. The relay allows air-traffic controllers to talk to ground-based Altair pilots through the aircraft." On several occasions, Joshua Control has called me with warnings about UAVs and their chase planes orbiting around El Mirage Dry Lake. The location is a couple miles north of KREY near Adelanto, California. |
#7
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On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 16:07:41 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote in Message-Id: .net: "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . How does the military's use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle intend to comply with the Part 91 See-And-Avoid mandate? Will there be new Restricted Areas imposed along the border, or will the UAVs be flown in Positive Control Airspace? Did you read the item before posting your message? Yes. Did you read the entire content of my article? You'll note in one of the excerpts of the links, that the demonstration UAV was at 200' AGL. There is no altitude reference outside of Class A airspace, so presumably see-and-avoid is not an issue. Agreed; your assessment is presumptuous. Yeah, they've got to climb through Class E airspace to get to Class A, but I'd assume that'll be done in a restricted area. From the links I provided in the article, it seems that the FARs are being revised to accommodate UAVs outside of restricted airspace. |
#8
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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message
... How does the military's use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle intend to comply with the Part 91 See-And-Avoid mandate? Will there be new Restricted Areas imposed along the border, or will the UAVs be flown in Positive Control Airspace? Good question. In fact, several good questions. As for "see-and-avoid", there is some visual feedback to the remote pilot ahead. I've no idea as to the quality of the circuit, nor the coverage of the sky from the cockpit it gives the pilot. If the quality is sufficient that the remote pilot can pass the aviation medical eye exam over the remote circuit (put the eye chart in front of the plane and ask the remote pilot what the letters say, color charts, etc.), I don't see the problem ;-) I note that there is currently no requirement for certification, even medical requirements. With all the fuss over sport pilot medical requirements, this needs to be addressed or we might as well not have medical certifications at all.. |
#9
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On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 16:17:37 GMT, "Tony Cox" wrote in
Message-Id: et: "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . How does the military's use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle intend to comply with the Part 91 See-And-Avoid mandate? Will there be new Restricted Areas imposed along the border, or will the UAVs be flown in Positive Control Airspace? Good question. In fact, several good questions. As for "see-and-avoid", there is some visual feedback to the remote pilot ahead. I've no idea as to the quality of the circuit, nor the coverage of the sky from the cockpit it gives the pilot. If the quality is sufficient that the remote pilot can pass the aviation medical eye exam over the remote circuit (put the eye chart in front of the plane and ask the remote pilot what the letters say, color charts, etc.), I don't see the problem ;-) That would be a reasonable test of the UAV pilots' ability to comply with the see-and-avoid regulation, but the UAV pilots would have to be able to see above and below and to the sides in addition to airspace immediately ahead. I note that there is currently no requirement for certification, even medical requirements [for UAV operators]. Can you provide a citation that supports that statement? It is scary beyond belief if true. Imagine the uncertified pilot of the UAV safely on the ground simultaneously monitoring video from the front, above, below and to the sides while attempting to spot intruders on the ground. How much time is going to be devoted to traffic scan compared to ground scan? Will the operators receive recognition for avoiding collisions or spotting illegals? How will the public be assured that their priority is safety, and not mission success as is inherent in manned aircraft where the pilots have their lives on the line in avoiding collisions? |
#10
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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message
... On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 16:17:37 GMT, "Tony Cox" wrote in Message-Id: et: I note that there is currently no requirement for certification, even medical requirements [for UAV operators]. Can you provide a citation that supports that statement? It's a quote in your original post, attributed to one William Shumann:- "Currently, there are no FAA regulations dealing with the certification of UAV pilots, aircraft or (commercial) operators," he said. It is scary beyond belief if true. Imagine the uncertified pilot of the UAV safely on the ground simultaneously monitoring video from the front, above, below and to the sides while attempting to spot intruders on the ground. How much time is going to be devoted to traffic scan compared to ground scan? Will the operators receive recognition for avoiding collisions or spotting illegals? How will the public be assured that their priority is safety, and not mission success as is inherent in manned aircraft where the pilots have their lives on the line in avoiding collisions? What assurance do we have that he won't have a heart attack, or loose consciousness, or a whatever? I'm of the opinion that physically being in the plane sharpens your mind up. When I fly, I'm constantly "on edge" and ready to react instantly to any problem. It's my bum on the line too. Frankly, I'd never expect that level of alertness from a remote pilot, slouched in a chair drinking his coffee, thumbing through "Playboy" during the dull bits of a mission, scratching his butt and wandering off to the bathroom whenever he feels like it. All he risks is his job. |
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