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You no longer have to register your drone
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You no longer have to register your droneWhatever you do, don't set your coffee cup adjacent to your turps cup.
Re: You no longer have to register your droneWell, I'm surprised.
I think the real reason the FAA wanted you to register a drone is so they could build up a nice mailing list they could sell. Dell XPS 8940 Intel 8-core 10th gen.-i7 10700K (3.8-5.1 GHz); 32GB DDR4 2933 MHz RAM; 512 GB SSD; 2 TB 7200 HD; BDRE-drive; NVIDIA(R) Geforce(R) RTX 2060 SUPER(TM) 8G8 GDDR6
You have to register your drone -- againFYI, President Trump signed the 2018 National Defence Authorization a couple of days ago. Buried in the the legislation there is a mandatory requirement that drones be registered and the number displayed on the drone.
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Re: You no longer have to register your droneThe good news is that if you originally registered your drone you are good to go. You do not have to register each drone. Once you are registered it is valid for 2 years I believe .
Here is the link http://federaldroneregistration.com/?gc ... gLDEPD_BwE Sidd "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it." ..... Ferris Bueller
Re: You no longer have to register your droneGreat news!
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Re: You no longer have to register your droneWhat's the penalty if we don't register?
Re: You no longer have to register your droneCivil penalties are fines up to $27,500 and criminal penalties are fines up to $250,000 and/or up to 3 years imprisonment.
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Re: You no longer have to register your drone
Just to elaborate on Bob's answer (He was faster than me.) :
from here: https://www.faa.gov/uas/faqs/
Re: You no longer have to register your drone
Sidd "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it." ..... Ferris Bueller
Re: Sidd's comment re the DJI geospatial information system
And the "best in class" system apparently functions no matter where on the planet one is located. We are currently in the Philippines, at a location where there is a large field, perfect to fly over, that is not far from an airport. Each time we launch our DJI Mavic Pro, the map on the Remote Controller shows how close, or far, we are from the border of a No Fly zone. In addition, the only Intelligent Flight Mode that functions is Tripod. None of the others that require lots of open space -- Active Track, Quickshots, etc. -- will function when flying in an area with a NFZ nearby. Yet another fabulous function of the DJI map is that it informs us not only of the location but also of the orientation of the aircraft, i.e., which way the nose is pointing. The Mavic Pro's Obstruction sensors are located only on the nose and inferior aspect. What this means is that, when one does not have visual certainty of the location of any obstacles, it is important to always fly forward. The Phantoms have sensors on all sides, but they lack the portability of the MP. The large open field has an east-west orientation. Last evening, we noted that the sun was setting at more or less the middle of the west end of this long field. You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post. HP h8-1360t Win7 Home Premium 64-bit/Intel i7-3770@3.40GHz/8GB RAM/NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050/LG BH10LS30 Blu-ray RW+SD DVD/CD RW+LightScribe/52" Samsung LCD HDTV (ancient 1080p)/PRE & PSE & ORGANIZER 2018/CS 5.1 & 5.5 (rare use)
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