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General Forums
Regional Meet-Ups & Local Flyers
Northeast USA
Flying over the Hudson River
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<blockquote data-quote="Scottalmas" data-source="post: 83558" data-attributes="member: 16410"><p>I think the only caveat I would offer is that, as long as your flying for recreational purposes only (i.e., no Part 107 license requirements), you can fly at night but you must be able to keep the UAS within your visual line of sight. I haven't flown my Spark at night yet. I realize it has more lighting than any of my other drones, but I feel like that might be a consideration in a full analysis and answer to this question.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Scottalmas, post: 83558, member: 16410"] I think the only caveat I would offer is that, as long as your flying for recreational purposes only (i.e., no Part 107 license requirements), you can fly at night but you must be able to keep the UAS within your visual line of sight. I haven't flown my Spark at night yet. I realize it has more lighting than any of my other drones, but I feel like that might be a consideration in a full analysis and answer to this question. [/QUOTE]
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Forums
General Forums
Regional Meet-Ups & Local Flyers
Northeast USA
Flying over the Hudson River