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Drone Sightings Near Other Aircraft Up Dramatically 132

schwit1 writes The government is getting near-daily reports — and sometimes two or three a day — of drones flying near airplanes and helicopters or close to airports without permission, federal and industry officials tell The Associated Press. It's a sharp increase from just two years ago when such reports were still unusual. Many of the reports are filed with the Federal Aviation Administration by airline pilots. But other pilots, airport officials and local authorities often file reports as well, said the officials, who agreed to discuss the matter only on the condition that they not be named because they weren't authorized to speak publicly. Michael Toscano, president of a drone industry trade group, said FAA officials also have verified the increase to him. While many of the reports are unconfirmed, raising the possibility that pilots may have mistaken a bird or another plane in the distance for a drone, the officials said other reports appear to be credible.
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Drone Sightings Near Other Aircraft Up Dramatically

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  • by ZorinLynx ( 31751 ) on Thursday November 13, 2014 @12:37AM (#48375863) Homepage

    Drones are so much fun and you can get so many cool photos and video from them.

    Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone. Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

    This is why we can't have nice things. :(

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Drones are so much fun and you can get so many cool photos and video from them.

      Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone. Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

      This is why we can't have nice things. :(

      No need to worry. The Free Market will sort this out.

    • Drones are so much fun and you can get so many cool photos and video from them.

      Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone. Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

      ...

      Recently on the news in Australia. If they see drones operating near bushfire where water bombing aircraft/helicopters are flying they will ground them.

      http://www.abc.net.au/news/201... [abc.net.au]

      Current regulations are that drones have to be 30 metres away from people, they are not be used in built-up areas, not to exceed 400 feet in height and not be flown in controlled air space, but there is no law against flying near bushfires. Drones must not create a hazard for other aircraft, but if the device was several hundred metres away from its operator, how would they know if a firefighting aircraft was approaching?

      • that makes no sense. who are the "they" and how could they ground the drones??? as for drones exceeded 400 feet in height, that woudl be one tall motherflippin badass drone.

        • No, our retarded fire chief wants to ground the firefighter aircraft and then blame any resulting fire death on the operator of the drone.

          Because you know a 2kg drone is really going to survive getting anywhere near the prop wash of a giant support helicopter and take it out...

          • by Splab ( 574204 )

            Birdstrikes are known to destroy engines and you really don't want to be flying a fully loaded water bomb and lose half your power...

            • They have yes. But have they ever destroyed a helicopter engine?

              This is a serious point I'm trying to make. Planes move forward at an insane speed. They bring with them very little time to get out of the way and the front facing turbines ingest objects with ease. Helicopters on the other hand move more slowly. When a helicopter is nearby it moves more slowly and due mostly to the fact that it doesn't take advantage of aerodynamic lift across it's non-existent wings it needs to move an incredible amount of a

              • No a quadrocopter and a bird will likely get downed by the propwash before it gets anywhere near a helicopter.

                Why reply when you have clearly not comprehended the dudes post?
                If a drone gets UNDER the rotor disk, sweet, it gets blown into oblivion. But thats only one of three possible scenarios.
                If it gets ABOVE or LATERALLY CLOSE to the disk, it could either be sucked downwards into the rotor disk, or, as Splab correctly said, be pulled into the tip vortex ring, which would see the drone be lifted over and into the disk. See this diagram [faasafety.gov] for a quick look at the aerodynamics at play.

                • I have, you have not comprehended the differences. There are multiple critical differences that makes it far less of a risk for a helicopter. Two I have mentioned already, speed and wash.

                  A third is the prop mass. A turbine blade has very little mass and is very fragile and has incredibly tight tolerances. A helicopter blade is large, heavy, more likely to destroy anything it touches than be destroyed itself, and if you take a chunk out of it its ability function isn't necessarily immediately impaired.

                  A litt

                  • by dbIII ( 701233 )
                    I suggest trying out that danger of a little bit of knowledge and google "helicopter bird strike". There is more there than I expected.
                  • you're my favorite kind of troll, the deliberately obtuse dimwit. srsly, no criticism, I do it all the time and it's hilarious when I see others do it.

              • Not an engine incident, but a bird strike that forced a medical chopper to land yesterday. http://www.ems1.com/animal-attacks/articles/2021439-Bird-strike-downs-Texas-medical-helicopter/ [ems1.com]

                Also, search for images for bird strike helicopter and see what shows up. Some serious damage.

                • No, a pilot decided to land a helicopter nothing more. It's written in the article. Helicopters will happily keep flying with broken windows.

                  • by dbIII ( 701233 )
                    How about this one:
                    http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-28224917
                  • It might have been the pilot's choice, but it negates the assertion that the downwash would prevent a bird or drone from reaching the chopper's hull.

              • by saider ( 177166 )

                Birds have an instinct for survival and will move away from the helicopter.

                Somebody flying a drone and looking through the camera at the fire/police chase/topless neighbor/whatever, will probably not be paying attention to the airspace around them.

                Heck, if you go out to the flying field, people crash into each other all the time, and that is when they are paying attention!

      • In the USA, I believe that we classify a drone as a flying vehicle which can be remotely piloted via either instrument or visual feedback. Anything else is just R/C stuff. I believe that is what these craft are. Although I did see one listed at frys.com going for $250 USD that had FPV video included in the controller. But I digress, my point is that anyone operating these type of craft "drones" should be operating like they would any other flying vehicle and be aware of their surroundings.
        • But I digress, my point is that anyone operating these type of craft "drones" should be operating like they would any other flying vehicle and be aware of their surroundings. It's a damn quad-copter with FPV feedback!, why the hell wouldn't you be constantly looking around?

          It's not like sitting in the aircraft, and even pilots sitting in the aircraft miss other aircraft now and then. You've got a dinky little monitor and a relatively narrow-angle camera, and you're trying to see incoming aircraft? Good luck with that.

          • by fatmal ( 920123 )

            It's not like sitting in the aircraft, and even pilots sitting in the aircraft miss other aircraft now and then. .

            Miss them all the time! Aircraft are small and the sky REALLY big! I've had warnings from ATC about aircraft on a converging path at the same (reported - probably uncalibrated transponders) altitude, and even though I'm sitting in a low-wing bubble-canopied aircraft (so great vis) did not see a single one! Not a peep on the radio from the other aircraft either - bloody scary!

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Thursday November 13, 2014 @01:42AM (#48376083)

          In the USA, I believe that we classify a drone as a flying vehicle which can be remotely piloted via either instrument or visual feedback. Anything else is just R/C stuff. I believe that is what these craft are. Although I did see one listed at frys.com going for $250 USD that had FPV video included in the controller. But I digress, my point is that anyone operating these type of craft "drones" should be operating like they would any other flying vehicle and be aware of their surroundings. It's a damn quad-copter with FPV feedback!, why the hell wouldn't you be constantly looking around? If more parents had taught their ignorant children, people would know better, but Nooooo. Some idiot has to shit in the gene pool.

          The problem is that R/C and your modern drone are completely different beasts.

          In the R/C world, you're constantly controlling your vehicle - because if you don't, you'll either bust airspace or it'll crash. You have to FLY an RC vehicle.

          Modern drones though, basically do "all the hard stuff" for you. You basically tell it to take off, and boom, it's in a stable hover 1m above the ground in front of you, and it'll do that with zero input from you until the batteries or fuel runs out. The autopilot on board keeps it in a stable position.

          The user of a drone basically just commands the drone to go to places, while the onboard computer figures out how to do that and maintain stable flight. There isn't much more to ones that can go from GPS waypoint to waypoint.

          The fact that the user doesn't really need to "fly" the vehicle leads to dumb users (they are REALLY that simple to fly) to do stupid things. FPV gets addicting, so they're concentrating on that rather than watching what their drone is doing, and oh, you just crashed into something you didn't see because your eyes were on the camera feed and not on the craft. (In the R/C world, you can never take your eyes off the aircraft or you can lose it).

          Basically the ability of the drones to fly themselves results in the pilots going from having to learn how to fly (and learning the rules and regulations as a side effect) to basically ordering it off of Amazon, opening the box, clicking "fly", and boom they're in the landing path of aircraft.

          Reminds me of that Simpsons episode where Sidewhow Bob jumps in a fighter plane, sees how the Air Force has dumbed it down to "Fly" and "Stop" buttons. The modern drone is just like that.

          • Gah! Where are my mod points when I need them? Thanks for an informative and insightful reply.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

            As technology advances the list of things that need restrictions will have to grow. There is no avoiding that.

          • "Modern drones though, basically do "all the hard stuff" for you."

            No they don't - they have auto stabilisation and thats it. You fly a drone in any kind of wind and it'll drift and you have to constantly adjust the throttle to keep it at the right height. Perhaps the really expensive kit has GPS and can keep itself at a certain location and height but the cheap ones most certainly do not.

            • No they don't - they have auto stabilisation and thats it. You fly a drone in any kind of wind and it'll drift and you have to constantly adjust the throttle to keep it at the right height. Perhaps the really expensive kit has GPS and can keep itself at a certain location and height but the cheap ones most certainly do not.

              You need to keep up. Unless for you, "really expensive" is $350.

            • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

              No they don't - they have auto stabilisation and thats it. You fly a drone in any kind of wind and it'll drift and you have to constantly adjust the throttle to keep it at the right height. Perhaps the really expensive kit has GPS and can keep itself at a certain location and height but the cheap ones most certainly do not.

              You might want to reacquaint yourself with modern drones. They HAVE altitude control. Throttle? You have two buttons, "Up" and "Down". They do everything for you. And you don't need GPS t

              • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

                "ou might want to reacquaint yourself with modern drones. They HAVE altitude control."

                Not the ones I've seen. I'm sure if your the same type of rich boomer who can afford 1K for a plaything then you can buy any sort of functionality, but I'm talking about the sort of drones you find in high street shops.

                "Throttle? You have two buttons, "Up" and "Down"."

                Seriously? Mine has throttle, rotate, forward/backwards, left/right plus trim buttons for all the them.

                "And you don't need GPS to stay in one place - a downw

          • Maybe this suggests a technical solution.
            Equip drones with GPS and nav databases so that they will not fly in controlled airspace. (with the ability to override with some sort of approval).

            There are flights in uncontrolled airspace but it is much less of an issue.

    • Why would a drone pilot need to fly near an airport? Those things can go anywhere. This just doesn't make any sense that there are that many drone pilots that figure that they need to fly near the airport.
      • RC enthusiasts have managed this for years without problem. All we need is DHS to follow up on some of these calls, they always manage to find the laser pointer kiddies.. Slap them wirh a day in jail and a $1000 fine and the next time they are caught its 30 days in the slammer and a felony. This is not a big issue. It's minimal. They aren't following up on the sightings they aren't even taking them seriously so why should we take them seriously I don't even take a circle seriously the whole bunch of rhet
      • I'd guess a decent chunk of (actual) drone sightings around airports may be plane spotters looking for that killer take off/landing shot of their favourite bird. You would hope they know enough about aviation to know how stupid it is to do, but like there have been trainspotters killed for being to close to the tracks, I'm sure there are plane spotters out there who are too retarded to realise hovering a camera 200 feet above the threshold for that "perfect" landing shot is a really, REALLY bad idea. This
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone. Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

      Yes, we know how much the government hates people flying unlicensed small aircraft, and you can fly one into a plane's path and cause panic or injury to the passengers. Hey, maybe it would be possible to carry a small about of explosives on one -- it would make a good "instrument of terror", so we have to take them seriously. War on Terror! RAH!

      But lately, more attention has been focused on how innocent hobbyists are being hassled with the new regulations, and folks are starting to wake up to how the whole

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Some countries have far stricter laws and model aircraft are restricted to specific parks in built up areas and are not to be flown in public space and most definitely not over other people's properties. Drone usage logically needs to be restricted and licensed and all drones registered. They are not for idiots to fly in public spaces where they can crash into vehicles on the road or people. That is a sound normal restriction for a hobby that can place others at risk. When it comes to explosives, flammable

        • by Splab ( 574204 )

          Denmark is a good example, they are not to be flown within 150m of any building.

          Interestingly enough, this is not a problem for R/C enthusiasts, but drone "operators" seem to think they can do as they damn well choose.

          Have had people do low flyover with their drone, no marking, no information on how to get hold of them and they are not flying in line of sight, if that fucker crashes into someone and causes bodily harm, its near impossible to pin responsibility.

      • RC enthusiasts have managed this for years without problem. All we need is DHS to follow up on some of these calls, they always manage to find the laser pointer kiddies.. Slap them wirh a day in jail and a $1000 fine and the next time they are caught its 30 days in the slammer and a felony. This is not a big issue. It's minimal. They aren't following up on the sightings they aren't even taking them seriously so why should we take them seriously I don't even take a circle seriously the whole bunch of rhet
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      And that is why we have lame (law/rule)s. :(

    • Drones are so much fun and you can get so many cool photos and video from them.

      Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone. Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

      This is why we can't have nice things. :(

      Actually, I think someone will find a way to steal them from the air and that will be the end of free roaming drones.

      Once people start seeing news of "my drone suddenly took off and left", people will stop attaching $300 cameras to their bellies.

      And that's why we can't have nice things unless everybody else has nice things too. Which is the most disregarded part of economic inequality and yes the easiest to sell.

    • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

      But i was assured that we didnt need regulation for these lil drones! Right here on /.

      They told me regulation would kill a burgeoning small business entrepenaurs by grounding them before they even started.

      And that we could trust them, no regulation needed, to just do what was right.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by dave420 ( 699308 )
        Are you seriously advocating having people shooting guns into the airspace around an airport? Regulating and banning is a great way to deal with this, as it allows sensible use, and any breaches will be dealt with severely. It removes the doubt over whether someone is doing something "bad" or not, and carries the weight of the law. I doubt people are going to go joy-flying their drones anywhere near as much if they know there'll be a rather large fine should they fly them irresponsibly. Flying a drone i
    • by xdor ( 1218206 )

      Yet these morons flying drones near airports are going to ruin it for everyone.

      No, the FAA already ruined it for everyone by redefining the rules against congressional legislation. They've also ruined it for business by not having any sort of a plan to allow them to be used commercially.

      IMO people like you who think good behavior will let you have nice things when your government is suppose to work for you are the problem.

    • They're ALREADY regulated. It's illegal to fly the damned things in "navigable" airspace.

      Further, OUTSIDE navigable airspace, a Federal judge has ruled FAA has no authority over them.
    • Expect to see them heavily regulated or banned soon.

      Exactly how are they going to ban them? Short of banning them completely from stores -- a heavy-handed move that would likely meet significant legal obstacles -- they're going to be out there. You can't control where people fly these things, either. You could try jamming commonly-used RC frequencies to stop people from manually flying them here or there, but you can't stop someone who might pre-program a GPS-guided drone to deliberately go into contro

  • Or are they remote-controlled Italian hyperspace toads being flown by Wi-Fi signals from an evil stealth Toad satellite over Chicago?

    • Our government has for decades refused to believe pilots when they report seeing UFOs, even when there is radar evidence to back them up. Now, when they want to prohibit the use of drones, they are suddenly willing to believe any sighting a pilot makes?
      • They never refused to believe. They always knew what it was, and pretended not to.

        • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

          Of course they pretended to not know what they were. If you keep telling people that it is just weather balloons and no one believed you, I'd start pretending that nothing happened too.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I was about to say that I've noticed a lot more planes around my drones lately.

  • In Canada... (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    In Canada, drones are more widely used than in the US, mostly because you can actually legally use a drone for commercial purposes. There are laws about drones: no flying at night, no flying within 5 miles of an airport, no flying above 1200 feet. Spying on people is also illegal. You can take pictures of people on the beach, not through bedroom windows of a 20 story building. Laws are fairly heavily enforced. The police have drones too, and theirs will go after yours. At the most fun: you lose your d

  • Not only does the FAA have to deal with these unauthorized drone flights, they have to deal with leaks from within the FAA to the media. These leakers are publicly stating that they are in no way authorized to speak to the media, freely declaring their guilt.

    When is the FAA going to crack down on these officials who are leaking information to the media when they have been banned?

    This seems to be happening quite alot, and it seems that these officials are able to leak information with impunity, knowing that

  • people fascinated with drones are fascinated with planes too
  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Thursday November 13, 2014 @02:01AM (#48376149)

    "The government is getting near-daily reports..."

    I want Slashdot readers to know I love them for so many insights. But let's not be arrogant about US citizenship. Many readers are not so blessed, and when we say "the government" they may be confused about which we are referring to.

    Please, then, say "the US government" if that is what you are speaking of. Notice that most of those outsiders specify which government they are speaking of. And for all you little foreigners, I hope you benefit from this message.

    • "The Government" as reported by "The Associated Press" which quotes people from the "Federal Aviation Administration" not to mention a website run by Americans.

      That description with so many country specific parties can only really match one government. I don't think anyone here is actually confused about this.

    • Slashdot is unabashedly an American site and always has been. Here's an idea, instead of complaining, why don't you start your own news tech website? No, seriously.
      • by Richy_T ( 111409 )

        why don't you start your own news tech website? No, seriously.

        Please. I'll give you money...

    • by swell ( 195815 )

      "The government is getting near-daily reports..."

      As I hinted, 'the government' is a useless phrase. Are we referring to the US Commerce Dept? The US FDA? The California Dept. of Food and Agriculture? The Texas Dept. of White Supremacy? There are ten thousand agencies, most unrelated to the others and few that the US Administration can be held responsible for (but go ahead, blame Obama). It is helpful to be specific.

  • OK, I'm talking more about commercial airliners here rather than piston engined aircraft, but don't they test those engines by firing frozen chickens onto them? If a lightweight plastic drone presents such a risk to an Airbus, then I might holiday closer to home on the future. Do flocks of drones really sit around on the grass at airports waiting to throw themselves into the path of approaching aircraft? Of course I'm not seriously suggesting that they present zero risk, until some loon packs them with exp
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The Hudson "landing" was caused by a flock of geese (and only possible with an experienced pilot with balls of steel and a shitload of luck). What jet engines are tested for is that they won't explode and damage and take the plane down with them right away. They are not guaranteed to keep working and they sure as hell don't provide normal thrust afterwards. Bird strikes are critical events. A single bird can bring down a plane if it strikes close to ground (during take off or landing).

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      OK, I'm talking more about commercial airliners here rather than piston engined aircraft, but don't they test those engines by firing frozen chickens onto them? If a lightweight plastic drone presents such a risk to an Airbus, then I might holiday closer to home on the future. Do flocks of drones really sit around on the grass at airports waiting to throw themselves into the path of approaching aircraft? Of course I'm not seriously suggesting that they present zero risk, until some loon packs them with explosives before deliberately placing them in a flight path.

      Aircraft engine casinga are designed to contain a fan blade breaking lose. They're designed to explode outwards (as demonstrated by the Trent 900's) and aircraft are designed to fly even when you've got one engine out of commission... however.

      1. Do you really want to test how well they're built on a regular basis when they're in operation.
      2. Do you really want to pay more for air travel because they're replacing engines due to "drone strikes".

      So sure as shit an Airbus (or Boeing) will survive a drone

      • What if, say, an ISIS sympathizer strapped some explosives (C4, etc) and nails onto the drone, and successfully got it sucked up into the engine?
        Granted most of these drones are the result of idiots - the same kind who shine 5mw or higher lasers at planes for kicks.. but drones could potentially be used as an effective terror weapon.
        • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

          Oh, that would be nasty, but it would be nothing compared to the danger of simply causing a jet engine to fall apart from obstruction. And with intakes, you don't even really have to be all that accurate, because the engine helps out by sucking in everything in front of it.

          Yes, these could could be effective at causing fear, but their use to terrorism doesn't even really require them to be explosive.

          Frankly, though, I think that the amount of work that they would need to put into a sustained drone program,

          • True, it wouldn't' be easy to get the drone in just the right place to get sucked up. But one successful attempt, and like you say, the media would be all over that.
    • but don't they test those engines by firing frozen chickens onto them?

      Yep and the passing criteria is that the engine doesn't destroy the wing to which it is attached and is able to shut down before it sheds it's blades in every direction.

      Now that said I pilot should be able to safely land with one engine.

  • Fucking idiots. Go drone yourself.
  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Thursday November 13, 2014 @08:44AM (#48377213) Journal

    Pay Bubba and his buddies to do patrols around the airport. Any drone which flies within a certain area is fair game for target practice.

  • This has the smell of a government agency putting out a story to justify the actions it has taken or is about to take. The FAA is obviously getting concerned that there's too much loose talk about reining in its rulemaking in this area, or circumscribing it, and wants to get out ahead of that. What better way to achieve that than to portray drones as endangering the public's lives every time they fly?
    • Only if they're in controlled airspace, where they *clearly don't belong* and can be a real danger, or at least, a major inconvenience to hundreds of people.
      I just had a 1500 mile flight last week on a 757, one engine's starter valve was defective, we all had to board a different jet, it caused a 2 hour delay. The people picking us up at the destination also had to reschedule. Multiply that by 200 to 300 passengers, and that's a best case scenario.
      Put the tinfoil back, it's better used to keep celery f
  • Make it mandatory to have transponders that identify it as not a bird to any aircraft that's near by. That should help cool the fears of killing another bird,

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