If it is a list drone...
...might I suggest looking up, in the branches of the nearby trees?
If your heart sinks every time you see a badly photocopied picture of a missing cat, we’ve got some good news. They’re about to be replaced by far better quality pics of missing drones. Reader provided snap - lost drone. Photo by Brian Gannon Photo by Brian Gannon Reg reader Brian Gannon spotted this (rather well produced …
My GPS capable multirotors have a function called RTL (Return To Launch), triggered by loss of signal from the controller, or by manually selecting it on the controller.
If I don't sit and wait for the craft to lock on to enough satellites to properly triangulate its position before taking off then that RTL function is useless because it doesn't know where it launched from.
Triggering RTL without a good enough satellite lock can cause it to 'go back to China', which is only funny when it happens to someone else.
That happened to me today :( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0-8mzlGNcA
Caused by a faulty PosHold mode which after a while it would stop responding to the throttle and just go down.
I'd forgotten PosHold did this on this craft so it landed heavily on the side of a hill. Thankfully the only damage was a broken leg and I didn't have the spare ones with me so had to trundle back home with a bunch of batteries to discharge.
Ho hum, next time I'll remember to bring the spare landing legs :)
I don't really see how geo-fencing would help with anything unless you literally want to restrict the thing to your back yard. Once you go past your own literal fence, heck knows where it might fall - knowing it should be withing a mile or even half a mile will not be of any help, except regarding how far out you should go posting your posters...
How about using my latest invention, 'adjustable radius drone range enforcement apparatus', the resemblance to old rope is a trick of the light, I assure you.
Obviously you can't use wire, because that would just be silly, even if it did mean you could do away with all that unnatural newfangled radio nonsense.
How about "Upon Loss of Signal, Return to Launch Location".
Only downside might be a new requirement to allow time at power on for GPS Cold Start.
There must be a half-dozen different GPS based solutions, most of which would be relatively trivial to implement.
The phantom drones have exactly that. It fixes it's GPS position upon takeoff, and will return to that point if it loses signal with the controller, gets low on battery or is requested to do so by the operator.
It's brilliant and gives you peace of mind when flying.
I have similar though not on a DJ1, and its good. Although not so good the only time I forgot and powered the drone up still in the office then walked out into the garden with it. Lost sync, flew to home. Into side of stone house at about 30km/h. The rebuild took quite a long time...
It is very important to correctly set the vertical component lest the drone bangs into the trees between it and place of launch.
This happened to my Brother at a golf course ... it headed back to him OK but it didn't climb to a safe height (above the trees) first.
Parts were bought ...
Reminds me of a few years ago, had dropped the kids off at their mothers on Xmas night and was driving back home.
Saw some adults standing at the side of the road, but they were all clustered round each other and weren't stepping out, then out the corner of my eye i see something shoot out from under a parked car - thought it was a small cat and hit the brakes, though not quick enough.
CRUNCH
Turned out the Dad of the group was pissing about with his kids new remote controlled car and had tried to send it out on the road.
Apparently I was the dickhead.
I used to do something similar but less dickheaded (I hope) with a nice R/C M1G4 I had years ago.
It was a pretty little scale model, about 1/12th scale or so and just over a foot long, with working flip up headlights, directional indicators and brake lights. I would wait on out quiet suburban road until a car slowly drove past on the way to the T junction two houses away, then I would drive out behind the car with the headlights on.
As the car in front slowed down and the driver checked his mirror the BMW in the rearview would at first seem OK, if far away. Then the perspective would sort itself out and the real car driver would slow to a premature stop while he checked his mirror again and his eyesight.
At which point I would impatiently flash the headlights, turn around and drive the other way.
I stopped doing this when it dawned on me that it was remotely possible for someone to be so fascinated as to drift out into the (not very busy) junction while trying to make their eyeballs work properly, but I took care not to do this too close to the stop line and had no accidents or squashed model cars happen.
It is my fond hope I gave the drivers in question a good giggle and a story worth a pint.
"
Meanwhile a Specsavers voucher for the tool who didn't understand the meaning of line of sight at all times.
"
It's easy to lose a drone that is well within line of sight. You can see the thing clearly, but become unsure of which way the thing is pointing. So you move the stick to bring it back, and it promptly disappears into the distance.
"but become unsure of which way the thing is pointing"
I'll vouch for that. I fly a little drone (farmland so no annoying others) and once it gets to any sort of height useful for using the camera, it can be extremely hard to tell which way the thing is pointing, even with coloured lights. Of course practice is difficult because the batteries only last for 5-6 minutes of decent flight. So I can completely sympathise with somebody who pulled on the stick to avoid a tree and realised they just embedded their craft into the tree instead...
I have a blade 350qx which has a "trainer" mode.
it doesnt matter which direction its pointing, if i push the stick left, the quadcopter goes to the left, push the stick away from me, the quad does the same.
makes flying it SO much easier. Of course, it has a RTB (return to base) switch. Whats happened here is a case of "instructions? Pah, dont need them" followed by "Oh shit its going the wrong way" and then finally "well dad, thanks for losing my present".
I mean FFS, put your telephone number on it, LEARN to fly one and RTFM.
*i upgraded mine to FW3.00 last year, took it out and promptly flew it into my window!
They are NOT as easy to fly as people seem to think.
"Meanwhile a Specsavers voucher for the tool who didn't understand the meaning of line of sight at all times."
The tool would need more than that since it was almost certainly a built-up area with people around, so was probably breaking every rule in the book, didn't know, didn't care and didn't spend more than a second wondering if this was a good idea or not.
Swarms of drones everywhere, no planes able to land, much blood letting.
@DropBear
In the UK the drone should never be more than 500m away and always in visual sight of the operator, not to mention being more than 150m from built up areas, 50m from building and people etc. Obviously once they go outside the rules and guidance, don't read the operators manual, make any risk assessments, nor allow the GPS to capture enough satellites for a good fix then the area to cover does indeed grow, but who would do that?
The "Phantom of the operator"?
"In which case, we can expect an awful lot more of this sort of thing as [semi-] autonomous tech decides to up sticks if you regularly let its batteries run too low, or feed it lower grade flash cards"
Which would only make it like the missing cats who move home to where the level of service is up to standard. We had a cat when the kids were little who did not like the noise and moved into a house around the corner.
given that the operator has to be in direct visual contact with the drone and not > 500m and the drone cannot be operated close to buildings, etc etc I'm not sure why this got lost
I lost a helicopter some months back - I managed to get it into a bit of wind, and I couldn't make headway against it. I could see the aircraft, I was in control of it - but it wasn't coming back to me. Eventually, it dropped into a field of rapeseed and was never seen again...
Vic.
I can never understand how it was possible to design a drone, test a drone and lose a drone without asking how do I find it? Do the designers just make a new one after they have lost the last model?
Didn't James Bond have a hypothetical tracking device in Goldfinger (the book) fifty years ago?
FFS. All you commentators are so fcuking perfect, obey every fcuking rule out there. Give it a break, its a drone to take aerial pictures, its 9/10 harmless.
If you all want to be wrapped up in virtual shackles/cotton wool, you're going about it the right way. One day you might decide to do something that's forward thinking and be blocked at every step. Most people using drones aren't trying to down a Jumbo Jet. If you think they are, you're deluded.
Let's see if you feel the same fcuking way after someone else's drone has hit you in the fcuking face while you are minding your own fcuking business taking a fcuking walk outside your fcuking house, or you come out of your fcuking house to go to fcuking work and find a fcuking dent in your fcuking car's fcuking door courtesy of some fcuker's drone.
Overeaction? Steve, you're the one talking about been hit in fcuking face by a 1kg drone, when you clearly never have. I call that the overreaction. I isn't funny because legitimate use of drones is becoming a pain in the neck by stupid over reactions like this.
There is 2 tonne of metal often been driven down your street at twice the speed limit, at all times of day/night. Maybe take issue with that first before jumping on the drone bandwagon, because I can tell you the latter (2 tonne car) hitting you in the face hurts at lot more.
If you want a Nanny fcuking state, you're going the right way about it.
What annoys me most is its people like you that are the first to comment how good an aerial shot is, as it motion tracks alongside a vehicle, to focus on the key actor in a film, all done by drones.
To be fair, the car is constrained on where it can go, and the drivers are supposed to be properly trained.
However generally speaking I don't have anything against drones, not had many encounters though apart from the small indoor ones where it was us flying them, sod to handle I can totally understand people losing them, accidentally hitting people and things, the death rate of new drones must be high.
@ A C
I F I WAS H I T IN THE FACE B Y A N I N T R E C U O R S I N G D R O N E -
Yours or anyone else's -- I'D BE MORE THAN A LITTLE UPSET.
FOR CRYING OUT LOUD MAN -- LOOK AT YOUR DOWN VOTES -- PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO TELL YOU SOMETHING.
No one wants unnecessary restrictions or regulations, but you're the best advertisement for the complete banning of these things I've yet seen.
Do you want that?
So shall we also buy cars because a tiny majority of them use them irresponsibly?
You have drone hysteria... At least you have managed to avoid calling all drone operators perverts. Because as we all know, the number 1 use of drones in 'hysteria world' is to spy on the next door neighbours daughter. And then - crash it into thier f*cking faces afterwards just for good measure...
Seriously - drones are pretty innocent flying camera used responsibility the vast majority of times. But yes, there will always be a few idiots out there.
Stay safe on the roads...
No, I've never done that.
Perhaps everyone would be happier if the drones were registered to an owner and required to carry liability insurance. And perhaps have a requirement that owners be certified to operate them.
You know. Like these face-hitting "two ton" cars you mention (though most cars don't come close to that weight unless they have a ton and a half of black market drones in the boot).
"If you all want to be wrapped up in virtual shackles/cotton wool, you're going about it the right way."
The problem is the 1 out of 10 dickheads who don't even pretend to be guided by the rules who cause accidents and knee-jerk draconian legislation that affects everyone else. Has it never crossed your mind why a new law was introduced to ban the use of hands-free mobile phones while driving when there was already legislation in place covering the general dangerous driving or not in proper control of the vehicle?
"Has it never crossed your mind why a new law was introduced to ban the use of hands-free mobile phones while driving"
Because the sooner EVERYTHING is legislated against, the sooner we are ALL criminals and the sooner ALL our DNA is on that fucking database.!!
Oh and because motorists are the easiest targets of the lot.
“Xmas day though is harsh,” Brian added, imagining “some Dad [is] in the dog house after losing his kid's Christmas present.”
The lost drone appears to be a DJI Phantom 3 and that's an expense more likely to be lavished on the father rather than a kid, although that is not to say that some folk have more money than sense and would imagine it a toy for playing with.
I can see a time in the near future where less scrupulous individuals replace the original posters for one with their own contact details. In a neighbourhood with sufficient spoilt rich kids (or self-lavishing fathers) they may even get several drones back from just one set of posters.
It's a scouser, it's an insurance job, well played.
Now if I don my Sherlock hat I wonder how he lost it? It has automatic warning on low battery, you can see what it sees through the live video feed. Did he send it somewhere on automatic? Why would you do that? Why would you send a +500 pound drone off on it's own? What purpose would that even serve? Would you let it out of your sight on the first day without fully understanding how it works? If it didn't go out of sight then how is it lost? Stolen? Insurance? Posters to cover obligation to insurance?
Therefore if it's not some elaborate insurance scam the guy is an idiot. If it was stolen it's not going to be difficult to track the new owner, someone from Liverpool ordering the controls for that type of drone.
simply incapable of flying it. Prolly flew it in the back garden on a densly packed housing estate, moved the stick in the wrong direction, panicked and the quad went off in the direction it was told to do so. Namely, the wrong one.
Didnt know which switch was RTH (return to home) and thats assuming he set up the GPS.
Insurance fraud unlikely (although with ANY scouser it wouldn't surprise me), more likely lack of IQ is the causal factor here.
I lost one in the North Sea on a lovely day a few years back. Wasn't even mine :(
I was decent enough to replace it at the soonest opportunity, but it somewhat spoiled the fun we were having. They don't half go when you get the hang of throwing them (but obviously not good enough to control them!)
Wasn't it really really windy on Christmas day? I know it was up here in the north.
I saw several facebook posts on christmas day and boxing day about lost drones, and when i glanced out the window I thought the swaying trees might indicate what happened. i.e. drone goes up, gust of wind carries drone a long way off course.
Surely this stuff is just common sense?