No, it is to prevent a model going out of control and impacting a full size aircraft.Jonathan Pelham wrote:With slightly more complex research aircraft our safety case and danger area is based on how quickly we can ditch the aircraft after giving a defined amount of time to re-establish the link.
The control logic is such that after the defined time period the engines are cut and the control surfaces are set to institute a nose up position and stall the aircraft and induce a flat spin to bring it down on as short a ballistic trajectory as possible rather than allowing it to glide outside of our danger area.
Donnithorne-Tait, D. (2012), "Current International Thinking on UAS Classification ", 27th Bristol International UAV Systems Conference, 2 and 3 April 2012, Bristol, Curran Associates Inc, .
Has a good figure which correlated aircraft mass and final velocity with the danger it represented to life on the ground.
That is the purpose of the fail safe. Minimizing risk to those on the ground.
I assumed ALL 2.4 systems had failsafe built in, Alan? Hitec and Futaba certainly do. And on all surfaces.Alan Cantwell 1131 wrote:First time i have seen the fail safe function descrobed properly, Ta Rob , just as a matter of interest, there are LOTS of spectrum recivers out there, in all manner of aircraft, all the spekky units have a fail safe built in, how many are checked at the average club field before flight?(i know nothing of other systems)
in regards to the scenario above, it sounds lime the drone is a level flight unit, therefore, the fail safe function described is ok, but its deffo not ok for model aircraft
Rob Buckley wrote:The purpose of the failsafe is to ensure the model 'lands' as quickly as possible within the defined flying area, and doesn't fly off and either interfere with full size a/c or crash on somebody's house.
That's why there should be a defined flying area, and models must never be flown over anything or anyone that could be damaged or hurt when the model 'lands'.
Bob Thompson1894 wrote:I assumed ALL 2.4 systems had failsafe built in, Alan? Hitec and Futaba certainly do. And on all surfaces.
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