Great video! Good info. The only thing I would take issue with is your statement "Part 107 waiver". Part 107 is the standard, not a waiver. All drones flown in the airspace must comply with Part 107 regulations with the exception of aircraft registration and pilot training for the "recreational waiver". Also, Part 107 is not necessarily commercial. If I fly search and rescue with my volunteer fire department, I'm not getting paid a dime but I still have to have a Part 107. Hope that helps! Thanks.
I think you may be wrong with your statement around the 3:10 on the video that if you are a party 107 pilot you need a RID on that tiny drone. If you are flying it recreationally you would not have to have an RID module on it even if you have a part 107 certificate.
I should have been more clear, correct, if I was flying it recreationally, but if I were to post the flight here on UA-cam and I flew outside I would need a beacon…. And there are a lot of whoop pilots posting flights on monetized channels.
Part 107 is not a waiver. 14CFR part 107 is the federal law that defines most of the regulations that we are all required to follow. The one exception is people who qualify for the 44809 exception, which is for strictly hobby flying.
@DoItYourselfDad I have the Spark and Maverick Air (old drones-only flown once), so I think it's worth it to purchase the Remote ID, and then use it for both Drone. Also, my recreational registration expired, I might not renew it. I'm just an occasional drone operator but an active (airplane) pilot. Thank you.
Can one disable replies to WLAN scanning with the HolyStone Remote Id Module? i.e. prevent anyone except the FAA and law enforcement from gathering the remote-id data.
@@dougbarnowski5224 That is what DroneBeacon db120 is calling the connection...WLAN just means Wireless Local Area Network. It doesn't stop the required functionality of the beacon, just allowing others to obtain the information being transmitted.
I'm pretty sure the tiny whoop is exempt because its under 250g. Also I wouldn't trust something that tiny outdoors and in a situation where LAANC authorization is required anyways. If the flight is indoors the FAA has no authorization because you are not using the National Airspace System.
Whoops, or anything under 250, are not exempt if your a part 107. You are correct, indoors the FAA has no authority, but I have more flights with my whoop around the yard than in the house.
LAANC airspace authorization Isn't required "outdoors". Airspace authorization whether through LAANC or a manuel request is required in controlled airspace (class B, C, D and E2). A lot of the airspace outdoors is class G (not controlled) and requires no authorization.
@@DoItYourselfDad I know how it works, it transmits data about the drone and the user that can the authorities access it and i heard that even normal people could but i don't know if its still that way
Great video! Good info. The only thing I would take issue with is your statement "Part 107 waiver". Part 107 is the standard, not a waiver. All drones flown in the airspace must comply with Part 107 regulations with the exception of aircraft registration and pilot training for the "recreational waiver". Also, Part 107 is not necessarily commercial. If I fly search and rescue with my volunteer fire department, I'm not getting paid a dime but I still have to have a Part 107. Hope that helps! Thanks.
Good point. There are many ways to stray into commercial flight territory without any money changing hands.
I think you may be wrong with your statement around the 3:10 on the video that if you are a party 107 pilot you need a RID on that tiny drone. If you are flying it recreationally you would not have to have an RID module on it even if you have a part 107 certificate.
I should have been more clear, correct, if I was flying it recreationally, but if I were to post the flight here on UA-cam and I flew outside I would need a beacon…. And there are a lot of whoop pilots posting flights on monetized channels.
The new Ruko R111 is just a tiny bit smaller and about $30 cheaper then the Holy Stone.
Part 107 is not a waiver.
14CFR part 107 is the federal law that defines most of the regulations that we are all required to follow.
The one exception is people who qualify for the 44809 exception, which is for strictly hobby flying.
This device can be used with multiple drones?
Yes, the only time you need to register one for each drone is if your part 107.
@DoItYourselfDad I have the Spark and Maverick Air (old drones-only flown once), so I think it's worth it to purchase the Remote ID, and then use it for both Drone. Also, my recreational registration expired, I might not renew it. I'm just an occasional drone operator but an active (airplane) pilot. Thank you.
I wonder if I could use it 🤷🏻♂️ on my Freewing F-22 Raptor EDF plane ⁉️
Should be more than enough room inside that thing to fit this.
What RID module is needed for DJI Mini SE if any? It is under 250 grams.
If your under 250 you don’t need one unless your flying for “non-hobby” purposes.
Can one disable replies to WLAN scanning with the HolyStone Remote Id Module? i.e. prevent anyone except the FAA and law enforcement from gathering the remote-id data.
what it doesnt work by WLAN lol
@@dougbarnowski5224 That is what DroneBeacon db120 is calling the connection...WLAN just means Wireless Local Area Network. It doesn't stop the required functionality of the beacon, just allowing others to obtain the information being transmitted.
My holy stone HS 600 has a built-in remote ID so that is not a true statement that it does not.
HolyStone added remote ID to the HS600 in October of last year, models sold before that (mine), did not have RID.
I try to fly my dji fpv drone last sunday and say "remote id error" and the drone won't fly....
Which model DJI? I fly Mini SE.
I'm pretty sure the tiny whoop is exempt because its under 250g. Also I wouldn't trust something that tiny outdoors and in a situation where LAANC authorization is required anyways. If the flight is indoors the FAA has no authorization because you are not using the National Airspace System.
Whoops, or anything under 250, are not exempt if your a part 107. You are correct, indoors the FAA has no authority, but I have more flights with my whoop around the yard than in the house.
LAANC airspace authorization Isn't required "outdoors". Airspace authorization whether through LAANC or a manuel request is required in controlled airspace (class B, C, D and E2).
A lot of the airspace outdoors is class G (not controlled) and requires no authorization.
If i would fly a drone then i definitely wouldn't want to install any spyware on it 😂
Tell us you don’t understand how RID works without telling us….
@@DoItYourselfDad I know how it works, it transmits data about the drone and the user that can the authorities access it and i heard that even normal people could but i don't know if its still that way
It’s not as simple as that, and it doesn’t transmit any user data if your not flying under a 107 ( which most people aren’t)
Guy doesn't charge his camera, and blames the camera for not working
Never said the battery was dead…. but you know what they say about people who make assumptions.