So I’m a fixed wing pilot. A rotor wing pilot. And against my will, a part 107 drone pilot. My take on drones is they make it as simple as possible to fly. Stabilized. Hands off hover. Whatever they can do to make it easy. Regardless of that I don’t know anyone who has flown a reasonable amount that hasn’t crashed or lost one. And we are operating over salt water. So a quick splash is pretty much a death sentence. So, I like the cheap, disposable drones. A shot you’d be willing to take and risk the loss of the drone is better than the shot you didn’t take for fear you might lose the drone. Or as my father used to say, part of something is better than all of nothing.
I have a friend who purchased a beautiful really expensive drone. Then a year later upgraded to an even better, way more expensive drone. Both of them were flown an hour or two and now reside safe and snug in their nearly bulletproof cases. Batteries dead. Technology rapidly leaving them behind. He’s afraid to crash them. Meanwhile another friend has micro drones he races indoors. He lets his grand kids fly them where crashes are almost instant and surely inevitable. Parts are a few dollars and quick to swap.
So my recommendation is to look at a drone like you look at sitting down at the blackjack table. Don’t put any more in it than you’d be willing to loose and still have a good time. That amount might be $100 or $1000. That’s up to you.
Dan and Bethany Moore
(Soon to be) Blue Phoenix - 2008 Selene 59