Bagarre wrote:I think the Private pilot requirement to fly a drone commercially is pretty ridiculous.
Do they need a multi-engine rating if the drone has more than one propeller?
If anything, there should be a separate license category for them because - past airspaces rules - there is very little commonalities.
They need their own training and certification path that runs along side the PPL.
Private Pilot
Recreational Pilot
Sport Pilot
Drone Pilot
I completely agree. I have a guy who works for me now (non-aviation related field) who is a real drone enthusiast. He wants to make a business out of flying drones, and he's also a general aviation enthusiast (though he has never flown). I'm a general aviation pilot, and I've flown his drone on a couple of occasions. He can more safely and competently operate his drone than I can, and he's a guy who is responsible enough to recognize that these drones can be a hazard to pilots if he doesn't fly it responsibly.
The bottom line is this: flying a drone and flying an airplane are more dissimilar than they are alike. The similarities end with the fact that they are both flying machines. A drone pilot doesn't need to know how to make a crosswind landing in an airplane, or how to lean a mixture on an engine to prevent spark plug fouling. They don't need to know how to perform stalls, or complete emergency landing procedures, or talk to ATC, or operate in the traffic pattern at an airport. They don't need to understand stick-and-rudder flying, and they don't need to learn about many of the other things that actual pilots learn.
They do need to learn about the U.S. airspace system, and they do need to learn how to safely operate their equipment without endangering others. But, they don't need to become general aviation pilots to accomplish this. I fully agree that some sort of drone operators license should be created, and it should focus mostly only the skills needed for drone operation. And, I think there should be a very abbreviated transition course for actual pilots (who already fully understand the airspace system) to get their own drone rating.
I like airplanes, and I also like drones. I'll admit that it is nice to know that having a pilot's license would give me an advantage in doing something drone-related if I wanted to, but I am also objective enough to admit that one has very little to do with the other.