Because its illegal to fly them over private property in most states and if you go a certain hight the faa gets very angry. In los angeles its just illegal period accept in a park for rc air craft
Wonder why the paparazzi haven’t used them yet and what happens if you shoot one of them with a shotgun hovering over your own backyard?On Mar 14, 2014, at 11:41 AM, Pablo Coronel <pablo.coronel.70@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:I can see this replacing the espn sky cam in a very close future for video as well
On Friday, March 14, 2014, John Palcewski <palcewski@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
sUAS News reports that "Orlando-based Sonus Studios is now offering aerial photography captured by drones. The quadcopter can carry a still or video camera and fly as high as 130 feet, providing a bird’s-eye view of indoor and outdoor events. Owner Renato Mendonca controls the battery-operated drone over a digital frequency, always keeping it within his line of sight. It’s also equipped with GPS as a backup to direct the drone back to its base if the controller malfunctions.
"Clients can use the drone as the primary image source or as a complement to traditional video and photography. Pricing starts at $500 for three hours of recording."
What is sUAS News? "Small Unmanned Aircraft System industry news for professionals. Drones, UAS, nUAS, pUAS and more..."
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