luckyoldme
Well-Known Member
Electro magnetic pulse? Seen it on the programme 24 it wipes out all electrical equipment
thankyou!! that sounds like trouble on the horizon!
Electro magnetic pulse? Seen it on the programme 24 it wipes out all electrical equipment
Drones will be a short lived phenomenon once we get to grips with EMP technology ,
You do not own the air above your land so therefore if the drone flyer is not breaking the law ie flying too close to built up areas or roads or airports then by shooting it down you could probably be prosecuted. Some of these drones cost several thousand pounds so if you are willing to pay someone for shooting their drone down then do carry on shooting them down. If you shot my son's drone down, I would be coming after you for compensation and seeing as they have a camera on board and all activity ie height, speed, distances is recorded back on my phone then I would have all the proof I need to prosecute.
You do not own the air above your land so therefore if the drone flyer is not breaking the law ie flying too close to built up areas or roads or airports then by shooting it down you could probably be prosecuted. Some of these drones cost several thousand pounds so if you are willing to pay someone for shooting their drone down then do carry on shooting them down. If you shot my son's drone down, I would be coming after you for compensation and seeing as they have a camera on board and all activity ie height, speed, distances is recorded back on my phone then I would have all the proof I need to prosecute.
What business would you have photographing someone else's land and property....and their cars, tractors, mowers, the layout of their doors, windows, security? Do you seriously expect people to put up with this?
Taking photographs of private property from a public place is perfectly legal. I don't know if that extends to public footpaths running through private property - I would expect so.In the equally unlikely event that your son was to take photographs of my property from his car, or on foot, without my permission, the police would be called. There is no difference.
In the past - 15+ years ago now - I have taken photographs of other people's horses, because they were photogenic. Entirely harmless. Nowadays I probably wouldn't do so, because people have become so touchy about such things and it would therefore be impolite to do so. I'd want to get permission first.What business would you have photographing someone else's land and property....and their cars, tractors, mowers, the layout of their doors, windows, security? Do you seriously expect people to put up with this?
First and foremost, it is fun for those who fly them. There are technical aspects of the endeavour that certain kinds of people revel in. The shots can be stunning and show features that wouldn't otherwise be visible at ground level. The motives needn't be nefarious.I can see why drones would be used for various commercial reasons, however what would a private individual want with one?
'No one is spying on anyone'![]()
![]()
!! How daft do think we are? Why is it equipped with a camera then? Just the job for casing a joint, or a bit of voyeurism.
"If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear."'No one is spying on anyone'![]()
![]()
!! How daft do think we are? Why is it equipped with a camera then? Just the job for casing a joint, or a bit of voyeurism.
"
There's an argument against it if it causes annoyance or distress; otherwise, it's pretty harmless.
Exactly, and if flying no more than 4 or 5 feet over my stable roof, on private land, with no access to public within 300 yards on a track (and completely obscured from said public track), then I'll make sure my nesting birds are not harrassed, nor the livestock in stables to be alarmed. Always best to remove unauthorised illegal trespassing isn't it?![]()
How do you know no one is spying on anyone or checking out if there is a handy quad around worth breaking in for exactly? Do you personally know everyone using a drone?
Well that has to be one of the most stupid of comments doesn't it? Of course I don't but you are tarring everyone who flies drones with the same brush and I am saying if you go around shooting them out of the sky when they are not breaking the regulations then you deserve to be taken to court. Carry on by all means - I am just trying to give advice, nothing more, nothing less.
I can assure you though that the cost of these drones means that most of them are not owned by little kids who can be scared away but by adults who will pursue a claim against you. Don't come running on here blubbing when an adult turns up on your doorstep with video proof along with height, speed and distance from operator readings.
Well then that is not following the regulations then is it! If you actually read my posts you will clearly see the regulations for flying. IMO if you do not follow the regulations then you only have yourself to blame if your drone gets shot but if you shoot it when the regulations are being followed then you are breaking the law and deserve to be taken to Court. 4 or 5 feet over your roof is not within the rules however 300 yards is within regulation - nearly double that and you would have a case. By all means carry on - shoot them out of the sky but unless you have a couple of thousand pounds spare then I'd back away from the drone. Oh and not all drones have cameras.
There are laws about the flying of drones. Technically you should have a licence, you shouldn't fly within 50m of private property and you shouldn't fly the drone more than 400m away from you (laterally). There's a height limit (as in a height you shouldn't go above not one you shouldn't go below, although the 50m would always apply) as well but I can't remember what it is.