FAA Remote ID and Sunday RC Pilots Good News

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FAA Remote ID and Sunday RC Pilots Good News

This video discusses the practical implications of the FAA remote ID and Sunday RC pilots with some good news on remote ID rules.

The FAA's final ruling on Remote ID was issued on Dec 28, 2020. Manufacturers must comply within 18 months of the rule effective date, and Sunday RC pilots (i.e. recreational flyers) must follow the rules 30 months after that are effective (around Sept 2023).

Remote ID (remote identification) applies to all Part 107 drone/RC pilots as well as all recreational aircraft weighing more than 0.55 lbs.

The FAA remote ID (or drone remote ID) applies to all drone flights in the national airspace system, to include commercial drone airlines.

There is some very good news for recreational (or Sunday RC pilots) in FAA remote ID proposal, now a final ruling. The FAA will allow recreational RC pilots to fly without remote ID once they are in an FAA Recognized Identification Area (FRIA), which will be established around Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) club fields. This is a great bit of good news for the recreational RC pilot.

The final ruling on FAA Remote ID is 470 pages long, so expect that there will be further updates and information on this rule that affects all RC model aircraft and drone pilots.

Chapters

00:00 - Intro
00:56 - Overview
01:30 - FAA Terms
03:18 - FAA Recognized Identification Areas (FRIA)
07:46 - Remote ID rules background
11:27 - Remote ID rule comments
14:00 - Commercial drone airlines
16:13 - Remote ID compliance
18:12 - Final thoughts
22:22 - Rudy and the rabbit : )
Kategorie
RC Stíhačky

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