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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

Lasers + Aircrafts

Joined
Jul 1, 2009
Messages
29
Points
3
a hunter shooting a gun at an aircraft probably thinks there is almost no way he would actually ever hit the airplane... ( have you shot skeet?) most of the time hitting an aircraft that has any distance on the hunter is extremely difficult. why do they do this? i guess just for the hell of it. Someone with a pointer at night knows that if he hits the windscreen it will cause a bright distracting flash... but they probably are thinking there is little chance they will succeed. I dunno why they do it, but I do agree that anyone who would condone the action is helping to ruin the hobby for people like you and they help prevent new people from being able to enjoy it. The TSA and FAA think that every facet of aviation belongs to them and they push to regulate everything. Dont think that they couldnt cause the fda to really crack down in the future if things got bad.
 





msnba3

0
Joined
Jul 15, 2009
Messages
15
Points
0
20 years doesn't sound unreasonable. You SHOULDN't be doing it. Drinking weed, smoking alcohol, doing alcohol is one thing, endangering others is another

seriously i hope that was a joke. and if it wasnt maybe you were drinkin weed as you typed?
 
Joined
May 12, 2009
Messages
1,403
Points
0
drinking weed.... :crackup: mad funny

Trust Cavok's words of advice, he IS a pilot, and i know him personaly

DONT SHINE AT PLANES lol

Dark
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2009
Messages
29
Points
3
Last night in Baltimore a pilot reported a laser being aimed at him, and a bright flash at 3000ft... I think ATC sent cops looking for them :yh:
 
Joined
Nov 20, 2008
Messages
14
Points
0
@dr-ebert, you referred to a picture of laser glare as a "simulation of a picture taken with a camera". Just to clarify, it is an animated GIF combining two actual photographs, taken looking through an actual aircraft windscreen. In one photo, actual laser light was aimed through the windscreen, toward the camera.

The photos were taken in an FAA Boeing 727 simulator in Oklahoma City. So while the background runway lights are "simulated", everything else is real. (I assume you understand why the FAA researchers would be reluctant to perform this test in a real aircraft.)

If you search for photos and videos of actual, in-the-air laser incidents, you will see that the FAA photo accurately represents a real laser strike. For example, see the image on the home page of LaserPointerSafety.com. For additional examples, look in the "News" section of that website; see the videos from April 8 2009, Dec. 6 2008, and Nov. 8 2008.

I agree with some of your points. However, I respectfully disagree with your statement that the photo is "not representative of actual laser incidents". The FAA glare photo shows the equivalent of a 5 mW laser at 1,200 feet or a 100 mW laser at one mile. A person does not have to be "very close to the runway" to hit an airplane at altitudes of 1000-5000 feet.

And, unfortunately, it is quite easy to hit pilots. That's why there are so many incident reports -- an average of three per NIGHT in the U.S.

There are many ways to reduce the number of incidents, and the potential for danger. People on this forum can do their part by reminding other laser enthusiasts to be careful when aiming at the sky, and to never deliberately aim at an aircraft. There are good reasons to do this: for aviation safety, for the laser user (like not getting arrested...) and to avoid having laser pointers banned (like they were in New South Wales).
 
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