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On Fri, 6 Nov 2015 22:27:54 -0500, Jerry Sauk wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/5/2015 7:38 PM, Jerry Sauk wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/5/2015 1:30 AM, wrote: On Wed, 04 Nov 2015 18:18:20 -0500, John H. wrote: On Wed, 04 Nov 2015 15:56:06 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 04 Nov 2015 14:45:37 -0500, John H. wrote: On Tue, 3 Nov 2015 17:01:24 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: ...eagle takes down annoying drone: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hr-xBtVU4lg Hope this happens everywhere... ![]() No you don't, dumb****. What happened to the eagle (if that's what it was). Those propellers will easily take off a finger, let alone cut up an eagle, or hawk or any other bird, very badly. You'll note the drone is still transmitting, which means the owner can easily retrieve and repair it. No one knows what happened to the bird. I hope it made it. And I hope you learned something. Myth busters tested drones. All but the biggest were pretty much harmless. Some of the big commercial ones with carbon fiber blades can leave a mark ;-) I've seen the damage a plastic airplane propeller going at a much slower rpm can do to a leather covered ottoman corner. Ate right through it to the stuffing. My wife was very unhappy. I'm thinking your 'myth busters' test is bull****. Although small and plastic, those props are going several thousand rpm, and they're very sharp. Here's a view of some of the damage caused with the airplane/drone that caused the problem, in some cases. It's in French, but you get the idea. Imagine if those cuts were in an eagle's neck? Or a foot joint? http://chrismeme11.over-blog.com/article-36258812.html Dunno. They were using a few different small hobby drones hitting a ballistic gel dummy and watching it on a high speed camera. This really comes down to this being a very light propeller driven by a pretty weak motor. You can't compare that to the old 2 stroke model airplanes. Based on what I've read (and heard), the lithium/ion batteries used in these hobbyist quads are more dangerous than the spinning propellers. Many are the lighter Lithium Polymer now which is supposed to be safer. Supposed to be but lithium is lithium and it reacts violently to water vapor ... just the humidity in the air can set it off. The safety factor is in the packaging it's contained in. If it is compromised, you have a problem. I visited a lithium battery manufacturing plant once. The assembly was done in a clean room where the humidity was maintained at 5 percent or less. As we were putting on our "monkey" suits in the lock before entering the guy I was with warned me about how hard it would be to breath when we entered the clean room. He wasn't kidding. When we entered I gasped for air at first. 5 percent humidity is extremely uncomfortable. Interesting. The humidity in an airplane at altitude is also very low and every seat has at least one lithium battery in their possession. I wonder who, if anyone, regulates the packaging. Some lithium batteries I have seen are in a very soft-sided package - almost like a ketchup packet. All of my lithium polymer batteries are 'soft sided'. They can expand and contract, but they're a bit stronger than a ketchup packet. I've had one expand quite a bit when severely discharged. Luckily I was able to salvage it following a tip in a forum. -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
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