Just FYI...
Excerpt from "President's Perspective," Model Aviation magazine, November 2010
FAA Ruling May Be Challenging to AMA
Things continue to move forward, albeit relatively slowly, with the FAA regulatory process for small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS) that will have some collateral impact on model aviation.
AMA’s internal workgroup, comprising members with considerable experience representing a number of modeling disciplines, continues to draft an initial set of standards that we will present to the FAA. The purpose of these standards is to create a path in which model aviation enthusiasts may operate outside of the "default" set of regulations that were [proposed] to the FAA by an Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ARC) in March 2009.
Rich Hanson, AMA’s Government Affairs Representative, and the Safety Committee chairperson, Jim Rice, traveled to Washington in early September to meet with representatives from the FAA’s Unmanned Aircraft Program Office (UAPO). The purpose of that meeting was to share with the UAPO the direction that we are taking with our standards and to ask for guidance to ensure that the form and format of our work was moving in the right direction.
The results of that meeting have raised some additional concerns for us. We have scheduled a follow-up meeting with UAPO manager Rick Prosek. This meeting will have taken place by the time this issue of MA reaches you. I will update you on the results of this meeting next month.
Comments
One activity came to mind immediately -- free flight. I went to the AMA web site to try to find rules or guidelines on safely flying free flight models and found none. They probably exist, but other than forms for record attempts, nothing obvious came up. So, just what is the legal status of flying free flight model airplanes? How do you keep them under 400 feet? By definition, they are not under manual control, although I think some, if not all, have dethermalizers to limit their range. Maybe that's one of the requirements.
I have no doubt that the AMA has guidelines. I'll keep looking. In any case, I think it's an interesting comparision, or contrast, with sUAS activity.
Here in the US I suspect that if you were involved in some kind of accident it will not matter if it was computer in control or pilot in control. You will find yourself in front of a judge / jury and they probably will not be technically capable of making a distinction (there are days I wish I was back in South Africa).
I know there was an incident a few years back in Hungary where two people were killed during an RC competition. They determined that a Hungarian state transmitter was the cause of the interference which caused the plane the crash.
At any rate i think that a heavy aircraft say > 5 kg can cause enough damage to kill a person if it it is colliding at max speed. So there must be cases where this has happened in the past. So the skills and level of control will be the determining factor here.
As far as I know there is no insurance coverage that would cover damage caused by an accident caused by an aircraft under autopilot control. There are as far as I know two companies which provide limit coverage for aerial photography from rc aircraft.
I am sure you could buy coverage but it would cost and arm and a leg.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that I'm somewhat optimistic that things will move forward in a positive way for sUAS activities, both hobby and commercial.