bigpete wrote:I'm looking at getting the next size up
Oldbloke wrote:bigpete wrote:I'm looking at getting the next size up
They are now being considered too. The 36mm lenses should make a big difference.
Tried 10x long time ago. Bit shakey
stihl88 wrote:This is what i use range is about 20 kilometers!!!
Example of a drone in action at the range - Shooting with drone 1000 yards https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6AS3Dau3iI
You can pick up the DJI Mini 2 SE for around $500 ~ $600 bucks and range is about 10 k's still! My son has one and it's bloody awesome and pretty much flies itself. It can hover at the target for about 30 minutes before needing to change batteries.
Oldbloke wrote:Would never consider a drone.
bigpete wrote:Oldbloke wrote:Would never consider a drone.
Horrible bloody things
bladeracer wrote:stihl88 wrote:This is what i use range is about 20 kilometers!!!
Example of a drone in action at the range - Shooting with drone 1000 yards https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6AS3Dau3iI
You can pick up the DJI Mini 2 SE for around $500 ~ $600 bucks and range is about 10 k's still! My son has one and it's bloody awesome and pretty much flies itself. It can hover at the target for about 30 minutes before needing to change batteries.
I've been thinking about one of these for a target viewing camera. Too much crap to lug around when I'm hunting though. Can you rig up a motorcycle battery on the ground to power it while it hovers at the target?
stihl88 wrote:I realize some people are anti-drone for whatever reason but I absolutely love mine, I've got a heavy RC background though so it's 2nd nature.
Great for hunting but gotta weigh up whether or not it's worth lugging around. Night time target acquisition is outstanding on the thermal units and can really cut down on the amount of time it takes to hone in on some ferals https://youtu.be/TtoxMqtYjLE?si=RZtj-2nIOG3EX81m&t=465. I'll be rigging mine with a small onboard thermal soon...
You probably couldn't rig up an external battery that easy but one push of the home button and you'll have the battery swapped out and back on target again within a minute or two and 30 minute battery life is bloody great.
Oldbloke wrote:Using gear like that, just isn't cricket.
Sure for pest eradication. But pls don't call it hunting.
It just isn't "fair chase" IMO
Next it will be hand grenade hunting.
bladeracer wrote:I can't say that I'm against them for hunting, more that it's too just much junk to carry in the bush. It would be especially useful for checking the cows as it would save us having to drive down to the blocks and sit watching them for twenty minutes to see if any are on heat or in labour, we could just launch this thing from the house and let it hover out there. It could be useful to get in and look at some areas on mate's properties that are very difficult to walk into to see if deer are hanging about in there. But if I manage to clip a tree I'm guessing I'll be walking in anyway to recover the drone. Trying to fly it around in trees at night seems like a guaranteed way to lose it?
That's true but what do additional batteries cost? If I'm out there for four hours I'd need eight batteries. Or do they charge fairly quickly off a solar panel or powerbank? Where I'm wanting to shoot long-range I have to trek around the end of the valley to inspect the targets after a session, which is a 2000m walk each way. It adds _a lot_ of wasted time to a shooting session and totally devalues any wind DOPE by the time I get back to the shooting position.
I've just bought a new phone so I had a plan to buy another SIM so I can set one phone up at the targets and video call it from the shooting position to view my impacts. And I thought having a phone on a different provider might be a useful backup when I'm in the bush. So I talked to the Telstra shop and they offered me a SIM for $60 a month, but he couldn't say for sure whether that would cover several hours of video calling as that counts as data apparently. And $700+ to use a phone for a year is ludicrous. So I'll probably just add another SIM to our current account with unlimited data and give it a try.
But the price of drones is coming down rapidly while the technology is improving just as fast. It's now comparable to wireless target camera tech I think and more useful.
I looked up the specs and max speed is 58kph, almost one kilometer per minute, which isn't bad at all, though wind could significantly reduce that. But at 10km range that's more than ten minutes travel time, less than ten minutes on station, then ten minutes travel back?
For spotting animals resting in the bush, or looking for sign along tracks, I really don't think it'd be very effective looking at a small digital 2D screen, especially compared to decent binoculars. But thermal would be very useful I can imagine, even in daytime? What is involved (money-wise) in adding thermal capability to it?
stihl88 wrote:No more heavier and not much more space than Bino's, but yeah it is one more thing... Definitely useful for checking on the cows, a mate of mine had the same idea recently when he saw mine in action. If you step up into the next tier you start to get obstacle avoidance which will cater for most obstacles except for thin leafless branches but setting it to 50m in height you'll avoid most obstacles then just use the zoom function on said target. It's got a return to home feature which can be adjusted to return home at a pre-defined height at the press of a button.
Regarding batteries just get the "fly more" pack which comes with 3, then if you have a need for more they're about $90 a pop or you could just charge them in the field from a powerbank, they should charge to full in about 40-40 minutes if you have a good powerbank, max charge rate is 28w to that's about 5-6 amps at 5v or at 3.1amp hour @ 9v using usb-c input.
Your math's looks good on the drone speeds and times, it can handle wind surprisingly well.
There's no off the self thermal add-ons so i'll be looking to piecing together one similar to this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTbsvgiypa8 We're not technically allowed to fly at night under CASA laws. The cameras on these drones have higher ISO auto set which provides for excellent picture quality in low-light conditions but in pitch black you'd almost certainly need thermal. You can install IR cameras also but their visibility range is minimal.
Sounds like you need to get yourself one, they really are a sight to behold. Consider signing up to their insurance plan which is about $90 p/year that covers 2 free replacement drones on "flyaway etc".
bigpete wrote:I for one look forward to hearing oldblokes review on the monocular as I'm keen on one myself.
Drones can go get f***ed
GQshayne wrote:Told ya!!!!