I didn't say it was your first time; I just made a general comment that before anyone's first time it's a good idea to read up as much as possible so you do not learn the lesson the hard way. As for what you could have done, I explained wind speed vs drone speed and what that means in terms of being able to get your drone back to the home point and I gave you my opinion about what to do. No need to get touchy.never said this was my first time, nor did i ask what you would do before the 55% point. I dont need a lecture, just advice in that specific scenario. I disagree agree I wonder if rather than trying to fly home at 1600ft i should have descended to 200 feet first (lower winds?), over rode RTH, and flew in sport mode via GPS directly enroute to home? Flight data is there....
If spark flies higher than the rth height, it will return in the current altitude. It will NOT descent to the rth altitude.RTH is programmable. First the spark will move to the preprogrammed altitude, then start flying a direct route back to the home point. So..... if the preset altitude was say 150 ft., it would have started descending... the rate of descent is slow in RTH mode, so it allowed the Spark to be stationary (or fighting a bad drift) through a long descent, that burned up more time/battery.
Here's MY take.
1) It seems your RTH altitude was 700 ft. Most cases, 120 ft will clear most trees and
typical obstacles. The lower the RTH, the less problems with prevailing wind.
2) You're flying too high. FAA caps UAS flight at 400 ft.
3) Technically, you're flying in controlled airspace (seaplane base about 4 miles away)
4) You're flying beyond VLOS. The Spark can not be seen at 1600 FT up.
All pilot errors.
If you were under 400 ft, and your RTH was about 150 ft, there would have been
a lot less drama. The RTH would have likely got your Spark home safely.
In the conditions you were in, paying closer attention to the map on your controller
would have shown drifting. At that point, the climb should have stopped, and
a descent to a less windy altitude would have minimized drift and power loss.
Don't fly so high. Learn how the Spark works. Learn how to fly it safely.
If spark flies higher than the rth height, it will return in the current altitude. It will NOT descent to the rth altitude.
That is the essence of my question, to kill RTH or not to if you know the circumstances your in. I realized them too late. I also did not realize windspeeds are much lower closer to the ground (duh..i know now...)
yes it was a WILD RIDE!! even the recovery was fun. I love this drone, just needed to learn a lesson yesterday about only flying out INTO the wind on any windy days. How would you have handled the RTH? Gone sport mode until 15%? then planned emergency landing? will it auto land above 10% if too high ? (was at 600 feet when it forced a landing) at around 15% battery.
I thought about the WindSock too but you'd really need one at about 400 feet to get the real story. Hook yourself up with those free apps, UAVForecast, Windy, they will give you up to date data about whats going on overhead. And, I will also suggest, seeing as you want to be a virtual astronautAppreciate the reply and looking at the data. Thanks! Yes absolutely a learning experience, glad it all worked out and will not make that misstep again. Think i might get a mini wind sock at my house lol.
No, it isn't programmable.ohhhh really?? hmmm... that is very interesting to know. Is that programmable? Or just make it a point if ever in a situation like that to
Step 1. descend IMMEDIATELY to RTH height?
Step 2.Begin RTH programming...or manually sport mode it back on gps reroute path?
Step 3. Search for safe landing sites
also McFly does not know air space limits in teh US. above 500 feet AGL or 350 above the tallest structure is the limit for drones and where airspace classes begin. Was i above that legal limit? yes. Likewise is your recommendation of 400 feet 100 feet below that legal limt we are allowed to fly? yes too.
And the Spark has only 15 minutes flight time. Pfft. I'm getting me an A350.I did. Pretty cool app.
It alerted me yesterday (October 11, 2018) of the world's longest flight was happening.
Darn near 16.5 hours in the air, non stop.
And the Spark has only 15 minutes flight time. Pfft. I'm getting me an A350.
It'll have to be economy, though.Why stop there, get an A380 and the whole forum can go!![]()
"also McFly does not know air space limits in teh US. above 500 feet AGL or 350 above the tallest structure is the limit for drones and where airspace classes begin. Was i above that legal limit? yes. Likewise is your recommendation of 400 feet 100 feet below that legal limt we are allowed to fly? yes too."
The maximum allowable altitude is 400 feet above the ground, higher if your drone remains within 400 feet of a structure. This is what the FAA says. So McFly does know the FAA rules for UAS operation.
Minus the battery the Spark weights less than the regs that falls under and is classified as a "toy" not "unmanned"
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