jes, your approach to friendly, non RCG exchanges is difficult for me to understand. "Zero for comprehension" is a stretch as your post was without any reference to a specific person/group/post and as such could only be connected to the post immediately preceding it. in that context it was dramatically overstating a danger unknown to you because, as i guessed, you hadn't actually tried it. as such, i could only roll my eyes and wonder why you'd make such a pronouncement.
maybe you should ask a few questions before you tell us your opinions.
Score double zero for comprehension.
It's
your approach that's hard to understand, bart - from several angles. Firstly, your response to my post was unnecessarily aggressive, particularly since you failed to understand what I'd actually written. Secondly, you claim to be a trained engineer and yet you persist in the approach that
only real-world testing is relevant to multirotor operations. Safety requires the standard
Scientific Method: hypothesis followed by trial. You can't skip on the hypothesis stage - and that's all I was doing in my post: hypothesising (hence the word "possibly"). The Scientific Method is embodied in the UK Health & Safety Executive's requirements for Risk Assessment as an exercise. (You'll have similar legislation in the US, I'm sure.) Simply put, you are required to list what
could go wrong and demonstrate planning to eliminate or mitigate all possible unsafe outcomes.
Straight off the top of my head I can think of a number of possible problems:
- what might happen if you suffer a motor-out?
- what might happen if you need to descend rapidly - is it possible to catch up with, and therefore get tangled in, your own tether?
- what might happen if you lose control over the aircraft (a fly-away)?
- what might happen if your tether breaks?
- what are the possible risks in deploying the tether to the target height?
Each of these (and more) needs to be considered and planned for. I'm not saying that tethering can't or shouldn't be done, just that it introduces additional safety considerations
over and above those of normal free flight. I can't write in my Flight Operations Manual "Bart tried it and says it's safe, so no further consideration is required"