Eagle Vs Drone (Eagle Taking Out a Drone)
Published on Feb 1, 2016
Dutch police have uploaded a video
showing an eagle taking out a drone.
Re: Stream of Stuff
Posted: Mon Feb 01, 2016 9:41 pm
by geckzilla
Wouldn't the drone's propellers hurt the eagle's feet?
Re: Stream of Stuff
Posted: Mon Feb 01, 2016 11:03 pm
by Chris Peterson
geckzilla wrote:Wouldn't the drone's propellers hurt the eagle's feet?
It's a small drone. I've been clipped by the rotors of similar ones, and while it stings, that's about it. And an eagle's talons are a lot tougher than my hands.
Given that this was a staged experiment, I would hope that consideration was given to possible damage, and ruled out.
Re: Stream of Stuff
Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 12:33 am
by geckzilla
Depending on the materials and speed at which they rotate I could see some merely stinging while others might potentially sever digits. Last year near here some guy was hit in the neck or head with a model helicopter prop and bled out right there in a freak accident.
geckzilla wrote:Depending on the materials and speed at which they rotate I could see some merely stinging while others might potentially sever digits. Last year near here some guy was hit in the neck or head with a model helicopter prop and bled out right there in a freak accident.
Sure, the bigger drones are increasingly dangerous. But the one in the video is pretty small, with fairly flimsy plastic rotors and fairly low torque motors. I'm not surprised that it represents little threat to an eagle.
Re: Stream of Stuff
Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 12:42 am
by geckzilla
Yeah, but if the idea is to train the eagle to take out drones operated in the "wild" then it could easily encounter one of the bigger ones and not just the flimsy little one in the testing arena.
Re: Stream of Stuff
Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 12:47 am
by Chris Peterson
geckzilla wrote:Yeah, but if the idea is to train the eagle to take out drones operated in the "wild" then it could easily encounter one of the bigger ones and not just the flimsy little one in the testing arena.
Was that the idea? It wasn't clear to me what the idea was. I'm pretty sure that law enforcement already is perfectly capable of disabling drones via much more effective (electronic countermeasure) techniques. This experiment seems more useful for studying eagle behavior than for managing drones.