I do have to give the guards points here in that in both cases, they had their jammer ready, noticed the drone in time – it has got to be mind-numbingly boring just standing around a fuel tank or in the second case, what I assume is an electrical transformer, all day waiting to see if maybe a drone will show up. And you have to act within a couple of seconds. I’d have been expecting to see more video of people screwing around on their phone and smoking or something.
The jammer they were supplied with didn’t work, but the human side actually did work. I’d have expected the reverse to be more-likely – the jammer to work had it actually been used, but for the guards to be off screwing around.
EDIT: Well, Electrical Transformer Guard Dude might have been notified that there was a drone coming in by Russian air defense or something, because he was on his phone and looking around prior to it showing up, so guess maybe it wasn’t just him being on-the-ball.
I suppose it depends on how the UAV behaves when jammed and the nature of the jamming. Does the jamming simply cut off remote control and guidance data? Then yes, the impact still happens. Instead does the jamming give false navigation data (altered GPS signals) where the drone will wrongly “correct” its path and end missing the target?
I’m not a drone pilot, but I don’t think those winged suicide drones will turn on a dime, even if the jamming is the equivalent of a full up and right.
You’ve never been on firewatch duty at a job before eh? If you’re unfamiliar, it’s when somebody needs to do welding or similar work requiring the use of an open flame in a work environment where that is not typically done or required. The job is to literally stand (or sit) around with a fire extinguisher at hand and watch them while they do their work, and to use the fire extinguisher if anything should happen.
A buddy of mine once had to do this in the middle of a parking lot for half a day. It was required to be done even though there was literally nothing nearby to catch on fire, so he grabbed the chair out of the office and just sat there and shot the shit with the guy will he worked on the sewer access or w/e.
I do have to give the guards points here in that in both cases, they had their jammer ready, noticed the drone in time – it has got to be mind-numbingly boring just standing around a fuel tank or in the second case, what I assume is an electrical transformer, all day waiting to see if maybe a drone will show up. And you have to act within a couple of seconds. I’d have been expecting to see more video of people screwing around on their phone and smoking or something.
The jammer they were supplied with didn’t work, but the human side actually did work. I’d have expected the reverse to be more-likely – the jammer to work had it actually been used, but for the guards to be off screwing around.
EDIT: Well, Electrical Transformer Guard Dude might have been notified that there was a drone coming in by Russian air defense or something, because he was on his phone and looking around prior to it showing up, so guess maybe it wasn’t just him being on-the-ball.
That was a winged UAV. If you jam it completely so close before impact, it’s just going to hit anyway because of basic physics.
I suppose it depends on how the UAV behaves when jammed and the nature of the jamming. Does the jamming simply cut off remote control and guidance data? Then yes, the impact still happens. Instead does the jamming give false navigation data (altered GPS signals) where the drone will wrongly “correct” its path and end missing the target?
I’m not a drone pilot, but I don’t think those winged suicide drones will turn on a dime, even if the jamming is the equivalent of a full up and right.
You’ve never been on firewatch duty at a job before eh? If you’re unfamiliar, it’s when somebody needs to do welding or similar work requiring the use of an open flame in a work environment where that is not typically done or required. The job is to literally stand (or sit) around with a fire extinguisher at hand and watch them while they do their work, and to use the fire extinguisher if anything should happen.
A buddy of mine once had to do this in the middle of a parking lot for half a day. It was required to be done even though there was literally nothing nearby to catch on fire, so he grabbed the chair out of the office and just sat there and shot the shit with the guy will he worked on the sewer access or w/e.