expiredLovelyCheetah | Staff posted Oct 04, 2021 04:57 PM
Item 1 of 6
Item 1 of 6
expiredLovelyCheetah | Staff posted Oct 04, 2021 04:57 PM
DJI Mavic Air 2 Fly More Combo (Refurbished) + $60 Newegg Gift Card
& More + Free S/H$769
$859
10% offNewegg
Visit NeweggGood Deal
Bad Deal
Save
Share
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
There are millions of acres of public land that are wonderful places for drones. The national parks have additional restrictions for good reason.
The only difference is registration.
Local restrictions don't make a distinction of a "toy" or not, just that it's a drone.
People at the park might view a smaller drone as a toy and not be as put off, but it's subjective.
All pilots need to take the trust test regardless or weight. It's like a campfire permit. It's an easy test that makes sure you are aware of the rules rather than a pass/fail test. If you fly for any commercial intent or making money, you need a part 107 license. Local agencies cannot regulate the airspace and ban you from flying over certain areas, they can only ban you from launching, landing and controlling the drone from those areas. You are also limited by line of sight distance by the FAA, so you technically can only fly as far as you can see the drone.
51 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.digitalcame
The UK, USA, Canada and China only require registration for UAVs which have a take-off weight (including battery) of 250g or more, which is why the DJI Mavic Mini, and successor Mini 2, were such big news. In the UK, however, the presence of a camera on even a sub 250g drone means the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) are very clear that it is "not a toy" so an Operator ID will still be required.
=================
We know there are a lot of restriction of flying drone in USA. Is there less restriction if flying sub-250 gram "toy" drone in USA like in park, etc? Or most places that restrict 250 gram or more drone has the same restrict of any toy drone that is sub-250 grams? Is sub-250 grams drone still required by the FAA to take The mandatory Recreational UAS Safety Test (TRUST)?
For example.... All national parks, for instance, are classified as "no-drone zones," whatever airspace they lie in. It's also forbidden to fly a drone over stadiums and raceways during sporting events.
For example.... All national parks, for instance, are classified as "no-drone zones," whatever airspace they lie in. It's also forbidden to fly a drone over stadiums and raceways during sporting events.
The only difference is registration.
https://www.digitalcame
The UK, USA, Canada and China only require registration for UAVs which have a take-off weight (including battery) of 250g or more, which is why the DJI Mavic Mini, and successor Mini 2, were such big news. In the UK, however, the presence of a camera on even a sub 250g drone means the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) are very clear that it is "not a toy" so an Operator ID will still be required.
=================
We know there are a lot of restriction of flying drone in USA. Is there less restriction if flying sub-250 gram "toy" drone in USA like in park, etc? Or most places that restrict 250 gram or more drone has the same restrict of any toy drone that is sub-250 grams? Is sub-250 grams drone still required by the FAA to take The mandatory Recreational UAS Safety Test (TRUST)?
For example.... All national parks, for instance, are classified as "no-drone zones," whatever airspace they lie in. It's also forbidden to fly a drone over stadiums and raceways during sporting events.
Local restrictions don't make a distinction of a "toy" or not, just that it's a drone.
People at the park might view a smaller drone as a toy and not be as put off, but it's subjective.
All pilots need to take the trust test regardless or weight. It's like a campfire permit. It's an easy test that makes sure you are aware of the rules rather than a pass/fail test. If you fly for any commercial intent or making money, you need a part 107 license. Local agencies cannot regulate the airspace and ban you from flying over certain areas, they can only ban you from launching, landing and controlling the drone from those areas. You are also limited by line of sight distance by the FAA, so you technically can only fly as far as you can see the drone.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.digitalcame
The UK, USA, Canada and China only require registration for UAVs which have a take-off weight (including battery) of 250g or more, which is why the DJI Mavic Mini, and successor Mini 2, were such big news. In the UK, however, the presence of a camera on even a sub 250g drone means the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) are very clear that it is "not a toy" so an Operator ID will still be required.
=================
We know there are a lot of restriction of flying drone in USA. Is there less restriction if flying sub-250 gram "toy" drone in USA like in park, etc? Or most places that restrict 250 gram or more drone has the same restrict of any toy drone that is sub-250 grams? Is sub-250 grams drone still required by the FAA to take The mandatory Recreational UAS Safety Test (TRUST)?
For example.... All national parks, for instance, are classified as "no-drone zones," whatever airspace they lie in. It's also forbidden to fly a drone over stadiums and raceways during sporting events.
You can still fly the mini 1 and mini 2 in parks. Just don't get caught.
Dell, Lenovo in middle.
Dyson is worst I've seen, they even lie about the condition after I complain their refurb condition is so worse, they sent me another one promised it's 'look like new' but just marginal better than first one.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment