A warning on travelling with drones in your luggage

The scary headline below should be a warning to all of us who travel with drones in our checked or carry-on luggage. Here's what I do, and it's worked well for me so far:

  1. I carry the drones in a Pelican case, which is checked luggage
  2. I enclose a note in the case explaining what they are, for the TSA to read. I use phrases like "robots for a competition" rather than use the word "drones".
  3. I carry the LiPos in my carry-on luggage, in a bag that clearly marks them as batteries. 

Anybody else have other good drone travel tips?

Quadcopter drone group held in London airport on suspicion of terrorism

From the article:

It was just as the three performers were disembarking from their Dublin flight in London that their suitcases were swarmed in upon by customs officers at the new London Southend Airport.

"We were returning to London with our suitcases full of drones, batteries and wiring equipment. Customs scanned through the suitcases and their eyes widened," said Young.

He said the officers then decided to call in the special branch, whose officers began questioning the three performers about their projects and asked them to describe what the electronic drones were all about in layman's terms.

"They asked us what electronic countermeasures we were trying to achieve! They took all of our materials and asked us for weblinks and references. Then they went away and Googled the project."

After that, Young said each team member was taken away for individual questioning. "They were also quite interested to know if we had cars."

Robotic ballet in the sky

Young said they told the special branch that their performance was a robotic ballet in the sky to show how communities in cities can use technology to gather and share information.

"My concern was they might have thought we were going to incite terrorism with the upcoming Olympic Games," he said.

But, after two hours of repeated questioning, the performers were eventually allowed to continue on their way. That wasn't before their conversations were recorded under the UK's Terrorism Act.

"Our stop and search is now on their file. We're now in the system, so they told us they would be checking us against our case file if we pass though the airport again," added Young.

(via Makezine)

Views: 4015

Comment by Muhammad Al-Rawi on June 26, 2012 at 6:19am

I was going to disassemble my quad and bring it with me to Bahrain for the summer, but it turns out radio control planes and helicopters aren't even allowed. :(

My electronics instructor suggested I ship my batteries, But like Mark said, pulling them out at security seems like it'd go well. 

Comment by Helitrasher on June 26, 2012 at 9:00am

Sad but true, Sooner or later we will be required to be tested and licensed to be able to fly RC because it is easyer and cheaper to hijack a transmitter than a real aircraft.

I have been flying RC for almost 20 years and I know that within another 20 years there will be no flying RC because of the idiots that live just down the road from all of us.


Developer
Comment by Randy on June 27, 2012 at 2:45am

I took about 8 lipos of various sizes between 500mAh up to 3000mAh and like some people above have done, I took them in my carry-on and treated them just like a computer (dumped them into that little plastic tray they give you).

I was asked about them every time and they were also wiped down to check if they were explosives (presumably).

I was half expecting them to be taken away but even after 5 flights I still had them.

Tokyo->Minneapolis->Denver->Florida->Dallas->Tokyo.


Moderator
Comment by Ruwan on March 18, 2013 at 11:20pm

@Chris, sorry to bring up an old thread, during travelling do you place the pelican case inside a checked luggage? and what is the case? (is it 1510?)

Plan to take my quad in an international flight. 

Thanks. 


Moderator
Comment by David Anders on March 18, 2013 at 11:33pm

Ruwan, look at the 1640.


Moderator
Comment by Ruwan on March 19, 2013 at 8:16pm

Thanks David. 

Comment

You need to be a member of DIY Drones to add comments!

Join DIY Drones

Social Networking

Contests

Season Two of the Trust Time Trial (T3) Contest has now begun. The fourth round is an accuracy round for multicopters, which requires contestants to fly a cube. The deadline is April 14th.

A list of all T3 contests is here

Groups

Advertisement

© 2013   Created by Chris Anderson.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service