The Editor
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- May 29, 2017
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Ahh, I see. Unfortunately, aviation law doesn't work that way.I was just going off the dictionary's definition tbh.

Ahh, I see. Unfortunately, aviation law doesn't work that way.I was just going off the dictionary's definition tbh.
You still have not stated what country you operate in so your aviation authority rules will apply.Perhaps you could cite something from aviation law which says line of sight means being able to actually see the object in question?
I understand that it seems counter-intuitive, but I've never known line of sight to mean anything but a straight, unobstructed line from point to point. If it was intended to mean 'within view' I'm not sure why they'd not use that simple term rather than mis-using another term.
I'm contributing to someone else's post - the question is not mine. I'm merely correcting the continued mis-understanding of the term 'line-of-sight'. Since you fly commercially and have studied CAP393, perhaps you could direct me section stating that a UAV must remain within eyeshot? Surprise me.You still have not stated what country you operate in so your aviation authority rules will apply.
My certification in the UK specifically states unaided visual line of sight.
We operate under CAP393 which is law over here passed by an act of parliament.
No - you made a comment which was factually incorrect.I'm contributing to someone else's post - the question is not mine. I'm merely correcting the continued mis-understanding of the term 'line-of-sight'.
Mate, the binoculars comment was sarcasm. I thought the emoji made that clear tbh. Which of my statements was incorrect? This discussion is about line of sight and it's mis-understanding. I'm still waiting for some sort of citation in that regard.No - you made a comment which was factually incorrect.
This is an international forum and there have been contributions from Australia, South Africa, the UK on this thread , all of which have different aviation rules.
Your statement was a blanket 'What about if you use binoculars' which is not permitted in many countries as an aid to VLOS.
Since you (still) have not stated your country of operation you cannot make a sweeping statement such as that.
Perhaps you could cite something from aviation law which says line of sight means being able to actually see the object in question?
I understand that it seems counter-intuitive, but I've never known line of sight to mean anything but a straight, unobstructed line from point to point. If it was intended to mean 'within view' I'm not sure why they'd not use that simple term rather than mis-using another term.
Go here. Fly under the Special Rule for Model AircraftMate, the binoculars comment was sarcasm. I thought the emoji made that clear tbh. Which of my statements was incorrect? This discussion is about line of sight and it's mis-understanding. I'm still waiting for some sort of citation in that regard.
I heard they (DJI) stopped working on the OTG so people buy their soon to be released (1/23) drone.What difference does it make, support is gone for the OTG cable.
Good answer. Visual line of sight is different to line of sight. Thanks for referencing that important detail. So, to go back to the original thread of conversation - no, you can't fly your drone so far away that you can't see it under FAA regulations. I bet a fair few of us, even the absolute sticklers for rules, have fallen foul of that one..Go here. Fly under the Special Rule for Model Aircraft
Download the Definitions PDF in the last link on the page.
Visual Line of Sight
While flying your drone you must to be able to see it at all times using only your natural vision
(which includes glasses and contacts, but not first person view goggles or binoculars).
Obviously...C’mon... I can’t believe people are trying to state line of sight means anything other than keeping the drone in view.....
Definition of line of sight. 1 : a linefrom an observer's eye to a distant point. 2 : the line between two points; specifically : the straight path between a transmitting antenna (as for radio or television signals) and a receiving antenna when unobstructed by the horizon.
Obviously, in the example above the receiving antenna would be the Spark.
Your results with OTG compared to wifi will vary depending on many factors. In contrast to you, I find no difference. I won't go so far as to disagree with you, though, as I know that OTG is better for some people/devices/circumstances/locations. If it were officially supported, I would actually switch to OTG for the following reasons:I disagree with the OP's post. I normally run 4.1.15 with OTG. I figured I would give 4.1.22 a test with just wifi NO OTG cable. Tramission was way worse, a little laggy and definitely not as good as using an OTG.
I would actually switch to OTG for the following reasons:
- It surely will never be worse than wifi
- Properly supported, I imagine a cabled connection would use far less power (phone and controller) than wifi
- In some circumstances it's a pain to have to 'Forget' a within-range known wifi in order to retain a connection to the controller/Spark.
- Having a fast internet connection whilst flying would be a nice bonus.
Indeed. What I was trying to say above was that I'd like to have OTG supported but I'm actually okay that it's not - yet. The thing flies and that's all I want - the rest would just be.. niceIf you have ever seen a Mavic you'd see all those points with your eyes(and most of all the very limited latency of the video feed).
When I first flown my new spark a month ago, no OTG, it was on 4.1.15 and the feedback was horrible: bad video quality and very high latency, then I tried with 4.1.22, always no OTG, and it was almost like a Mavic. I'm satisfied by that, I only suffer the obvious short range issue due to being in UE, so I'll soon try a modded app in order to get FCC: once that will be done I'll be more than happy with this Spark
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