Operating rules for UAVs:
• An unmanned aircraft must never be flown beyond the normal unaided ‘line of sight’ of the person operating it. This is generally measured as 500m horizontally or 400ft vertically.
• An unmanned aircraft fitted with a camera must always be flown at least 50m distance away from a person, vehicle, building or structure.
• An unmanned aircraft fitted with a camera must not be flown within 150m of a congested area or large group of people, such as a sporting event or concert.
I never understood why the FAA didn't just adopt the same rules since they are working regs.
If it was a flyaway, he needs better legal advice.
I've been reading his posts for the last month leading up to this case and he seemed to just lie down and give up. He didn't even go to the hearing. His legal advice was just terrible!
Anyone in the UK who needs a specialist lawyer for this kind of case ask for Peter Lee.
The problem the CAA has is lack of evidence in many cases. In this case the pilot is seen in the video and the aircraft was recovered by someone else, I believe.
He was flying APM 2.5. He lost visual contact and initiated failsafe which failed. This is the point the CAA picked up on. You must maintain visual contact and must make sure your failsafe is in working order.
I was surprised by this case as we have all seen far worse uses of a UAV.
If anyone has seen a UK show called 'Kirsties Best of Both Worlds' they are flying over main roads, down high-streets and over members of the public all the time. And these guys are qualified (LA Media in Edinburgh).
Interesting you should mention "Kirsties Best of Both Worlds". I had been worndering how LA Media had gained permission to do some of their extreme shots and what safety case/mitigation they would have to present to the CAA.
As Carapau said, they're not with ARPAS as far as we know.