Funny, I just did the same thing ...
- John Leigh
Douglas, Brent wrote:
that article demanded a reply - I sent a polite letter to the writer,
asking that he amend his story to talk about the danger of a shoot
down... why a parkflier is not really a toy...
RCSE-List facilities provided by
a crime.
Jason Werner
- Original Message -
From: Matthew Orme [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2002 3:19 PM
Subject: Re: [RCSE] Frequency Control / safety
At 08:51 PM 1/30/02, Simon Van Leeuwen wrote:
Those, who
that
article demanded a reply - I sent a polite letter to the writer, asking that he
amend his story to talk about the danger of a shoot down... why a parkflier is
not really a toy...
it
would be nice to see the AMA put out some literature on this in the magazines,
something I see
The illegal act is when you intentionally destroy property or cause harm
by operating your equipment.
Knowingly doing it, is way different than negligently doing it. If I just
fly on a frequency, there is no intent to cause damage (negligence maybe,
but not criminal).
if you tell me
Matthew Orme wrote:
Sure you can. If I am flying on a frequency, I have no duty, legal or
otherwise, to give you a turn. Your option, is to go away, or change
frequencies. the politeness police can come talk to me, but neither
the FCC, or the police give a rats a**. No laws are broken.
Man, look at the technology our computer radios have, and they are
so stupid about stomping all over each others frequencies. I know
the technology is available to keep this from happening. I for one
would pay for it even if it meant buying a new system.
Well, you could at least stack the
I think we should all have a unique ID in our tx and a way to set
the ID in the rx with microswitches or programming. The only way to
escape all the newbies and throw away RTF's is to have this coded
system on a separate freq. band, and priced in the league for the
guys flying expensive
I'm gonna cut this thread short, I was really just sympathizing with Tom
loosing his second model to the same reason in such a short period of
time. Main point, like he even cares what I think too.
I should have never mentioned and frequency control issues on RCSE, that
will never get solved
In a message dated 01/30/2002 10:38:18 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Get off it Jim. This is an equal opportunity sport (or hobby,depending
on who you listen to.) Flying an overpriced ARF does not give you any
priority over those who build our own simple DLGs.
Dont get your feathers ruffled. All I said was that just because you
choose to fly overpriced, pre-build, moulded ARFS does not give you any
frequency advantage. Yes I would pay for your overpriced mouldy if:
1. I shot it down
2. you were on the frequency board when I started to fly.
If you
I'm gonna cut this thread short, I was really just sympathizing with Tom loosing his
second model to the same reason in such a short period of time. Main point, like he
even cares what I think too.
I should have never mentioned and frequency control issues on RCSE, that will never
get
-Original Message-
From: David A. Enete [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 6:49 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [RCSE] Frequency Control / safety
Man, look at the technology our computer radios have, and they are
so stupid about stomping all over each others
On Wed, 30 Jan 2002, David A. Enete wrote:
Packet radio perhaps?
Or, true digital radios with a signature at some point (just hope you
don't need fast input after an unqualified signal).
802.11 (usually known as AirPort) give 11 megabit/sec (about 100k). I
have one in the laptop I'm
It would be a bit of effort, but would probably pay off to some extent in
the long run:
Make up some professional-looking (i.e. NOT handwritten) single-page Tip
Sheets. We'll call them that for now, if for no other reason than I can't
think of anything fancier. Briefly and simply explain the
802.11 (usually known as AirPort) give 11 megabit/sec (about 100k). I
have one in the laptop I'm using now (Monkey King)
Your network is using 802.11b -- WiFi in today's parlance (its what Apple
uses in their AirPort products). Its not going to work too well to control a
model since the range
Message -
From: glide [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 10:09 PM
Subject: RE: [RCSE] Frequency Control / safety
I switched to the ham band almost ten years ago just because I
was tired of
sharing freqs when I was at the slopes. At the moment, I'm
I believe that hams the government are the only authorized users of the
50-54 MHz band, and most hams will stick to the voluntary bandplans so I
think you are pretty safe if you are on those bands.
On another subject, something that will hopefully help eliminate getting
shot down, does anybody
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