View allAll Photos Tagged Quadcopter
This summer, my son took me up in the hills to an old WWII abandoned bunker. How they got all that concrete way up here in the mid 40's is beyond me.
On the way down from exploring, we stopped at the wye junction in the road (you can just see us down there) and I got out my DJI Phantom 4 quadcopter to take a look around. At this point, we are more than 1/2 way down from the mountain that is to our left and behind us.
We are looking East here. Seattle would be way back there.. Canada would be to our left. I believe the quad was around 400' high when I took this.
Easter is my favorite time of year.
I took this photo using my DJI P4 quadcopter at our church. I think it was around 50 ft high.
Hope everyone has a great day. We are off to see our kids.
Easter Song-By Keith Green
Persistent offshore winds the last couple of days have flattened this part of the Tasman Sea adjoining the NSW Far South Coast at Cuttagee. Ominous rain cloud moving in from the southwest suggest quite different conditions tomorrow. A horizontal stitch of two frames taken by Petrov, a Phantom 3 Advanced quadcopter.
Seas flat as a tack today and a slightly weird colour as dark rain clouds drifted overhead. A vertical stitch of three frames taken by Petrov, a Phantom 3 Advanced quadcopter. Cuttagee, NSW Far South Coast.
Created for the Kreative People Contest Things That Fly
All photos used are my own.
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All rights reserved. This photo is not authorized for use on your blogs, pin boards, websites or use in any other way. You may NOT download this image without written permission from lemon~art.
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I found this flying machine forgotten in inventory.
It is freebie but with all features of 2K flying machine.
Very reliable, manoureable, and quick.
I havent tried weaponry scripts as these arent my subject of interest.
8159, 8111, 8177 and 8217 work 9335 empty Manildra grain from Bomaderry through Mittagong Junction to Barmedman.
2022-08-03 Pacific National 8159-8111-8177-8217 Mittagong 9335
This is the place our quadcopter died when it got hit with a golf ball! Of all things... that story in a moment. Here's an amazing place on the North Island of New Zealand called @boomrocklodge ! Wow what a place. We choppered in here and had a crazy two hours — we started racing around a private racetrack inside the newest Mercedes AMG sportscar, then off to shoot clay birds, then to a driving range where you hit balls into the ocean (and quadcopters) with some drinks and tasty treats, then back home on a 10 minute helicopter flight to Wellington. It was definitely an amazing time... never seen anything like it! As for the quadcopter thing, we had the DJI Phantom 4 out taking videos. We were pretty far away, so while we were trying to get a skilled shot, Bartman got a lucky shot and took out the quad! It spiralled to the ground in a dramatic death. Curtis went deep into the bush to see what he could find. We made the recovery, and we're still pouring over the video to see if we can espy its final moment. via Trey Ratcliff on FB at ift.tt/1v05hWZ Snapchat: treyratcliff ift.tt/1qx3iMJ Instagram: treyratcliff ift.tt/1c7s6Uy
Besides being Australia's sporting colours, this is two different spring crops, near one of my construction sites, looking down from my drone. It would be nice to go back in a few weeks when the crops are thicker.
The yellow is Canola & the green is wheat or barley probably.
There are also 2 fences if this counts
Local suburban parks are being more and more commonly used by people flying and practicing with drone toys. This is a high performance drone being flown by some local guys.
The camera in front is sending its feed back to the headset of the guy flying it.
My new DJI Phantom 3 Professional quadcopter provides me perspectives that I never had in the past. Ever since moving to Camarillo almost 11 years ago I could envision this perspective, but had no vehicle to obtain a photo. It wasn't until I used my drone/quadcopter this weekend when I saw a sunset coming on did I make this photo a reality.
The Phantom 3 shoots in DNG/RAW and has a good enough dynamic range to pull out the shadows and control the highlights. I'm only allowed to fly about 400ft above where I launch, but that's typically plenty high enough to obtain amazing shots like this. So many possibilities to come.
Late evening sun casts long shadows and goldend light over a field of rapeseed on the outskirts of York.
This was taken using a camera equipped quadcopter at an altitude of 6.3 metres above ground and is the first proper landscape I've shot in this way.
For reference I used a DJI Phantom 2 Vision equipped with a DJI FC200 camera mounted on a Rotorpixel gimbal and controlled from the ground using an iPhone and the DJI app which allows first person view control.
If you like my photos please have a look at my website, www.markmullenphotography.co.uk , on facebook www.facebook.com/markmullenphotography and on twitter www.twitter.com/markmullenphoto
I was doing a run around this lake (it’s about 8 km and a little bit hilly as you can see there on the right), and I noticed how still everything was. It’s not always like this… so halfway through the run, I decided to call my assistant and have them bring out my quadcopter to grab this shot. Drones are so good nowadays; I almost prefer to use them over my regular camera. When it comes to shooting landscape photos, the f-stop isn’t especially important since you want everything in focus anyway. Also, it has around the same number of megapixels as my high-end Sony, so there is not a lot of difference. And, if you are making panoramas, you can still make prints at least 10ft across, which is more than big enough for major installations.
I took my quadcopter to a new high to see the curve of the earth over Grand Cayman island during another amazing sunset. Next, heading to Aruba then San Juan then St. Thomas before stopping in Cairo to visit the Great Pyramids and then back to New Zealand. #grandcayman #caymancookout #rcmemories #ritcarlton @ritzcarlton via Trey Ratcliff on FB at ift.tt/1v05hWZ Snapchat: treyratcliff ift.tt/1qx3iMJ Instagram: treyratcliff ift.tt/1c7s6Uy
An idea I've tinkered with in the past, a flight mode for Arthur's personal vehicle/a flash forward of The Empress' future in the age of flying cars.
The quadcopter design I've used has always been inspired by Roland Skof-Peschetz's beautiful Quadcopter concepts and blew it out of the water again with his fantastic Ferrari Quadcopter design www.flickr.com/photos/rpeschetz/49703750387/in/faves-9757...
Thank you for visiting - ❤ with gratitude! Fave if you like it, add comments below, order beautiful HDR prints at qualityHDR.com.
We went to the Death Valley in California with the goal to experience the sailing stones on the Racetrack Playa at new moon. On the next morning we walked on the playa (dry lakebed). My friend took along his quadcopter, here about to take off.
I processed a balanced and a paintery HDR photo from a RAW exposure, merged them selectively, and carefully adjusted the curves and color balance.
-- © Peter Thoeny, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, HDR, 1 RAW exposure, NEX-6, _DSC4067_hdr1bal1pai1h
A Little Planet view of "The Murrah" spherical panorama posted a couple of days ago. Generated by DJI Fly from 35 jpegs obtained by a DJI Mini 3 quadcopter.
A beach all to myself this morning with my quadcopter Petrov hovering high above. Barragga Bay, NSW Far South Coast.
Thank you very much everyone for your visits, comments and faves. I greatly appreciate you taking the time to do so.
Where I don't want my quadcopter Petrov to land!
The cliffs and rock outcrops below are dominated by Ordovician metasediments characterised by thin, very steeply dipping strata that present long, but small amplitude, ridgelines along the shore. Towards the lower left of the frame large yellowish boulders of Eden Rhyolite mark and partly cover a localised outcrop of this younger formation. Barragga Bay, Far South Coast NSW, Australia.
Day 1 of Pentax Forum's Daily in March 2018 Challenge.
Thank you very much everyone for your visits, comments and faves. I greatly appreciate you taking the time to do so.
Known locally as just "The Murrah", this area is centred on the Murrah (or Dry) River, whose floodplains support beef cattle grazing, with bounding uplands exploited for forest hardwoods.
A jpeg panorama developed within the Radio Controller coupled to a DJI Mini 3 quadcopter (Baiame), whose camera automatically captured 35 jpeg images - rotating 360 degrees horizontally while hovering at the same position, and tilting vertically through 180 degrees for each rotation component.
The composite panorama is somewhat disappointing in terms of IQ, as individual frames feature razor sharp fine detail, but it's the first one that has successfully loaded to Flickr with viewer scrolling capability - you get a good idea of the general area, and I'll post some of the individual frames later. Click and drag to change the viewpoint.
« If you appreciate my work and would like to support me becoming an independent photographer, become a Patreon supporter at www.patreon.com/alexdehaas, or buy me a coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/alexdehaas :) »
Thank you for visiting - ❤ with gratitude! Fave if you like it, add comments below, get beautiful HDR prints at qualityHDR.com.
Recently we went to Nevada's Black Rock Desert over the weekend to participate in a rocket launch event. At sunset two people flew their quadcopters as the moon as rising. I caught all three in this shot.
I processed a balanced HDR photo from a RAW exposure.
-- © Peter Thoeny, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, HDR, 1 RAW exposure, NEX-6, _DSC8924_hdr1bal1d
It's a small world after all'
Been around 3 yrs off Flickr other than a few here and there. Hope to catch up and see the world through all of your eyes again. The Gkids are with their father and life is moving on!
100' high, DJI Phantom 4 quadcopter.
This is 27 photos stitched together in a older, free Microsoft program called; Image Composite Editor. You can make normal panno's, this globe effect or other effects. Depending on how you save it, the file can get fairly large. My laptop can't handle it.
Trey RatcliThis is the place our quadcopter died when it got hit with a golf ball! Of all things… that story in a moment.
Here's an amazing place on the North Island of New Zealand called Boomrock ! Wow, what a place. We choppered in here and had a crazy two hours — we started racing around a private race track inside the newest Mercedes AMG sports car, then off to shoot clay birds, then to a driving range where you hit balls into the ocean (and quadcopters) with some drinks and tasty treats, then back home on a 10 minute helicopter flight to Wellington. It was definitely an amazing time… never seen anything like it!
As for the quadcopter thing, we had the DJI Phantom 4 out taking videos. We were pretty far away, so while we were trying to get a skilled shot, Bartman got a lucky shot and took out the quad! It spiraled to the ground in a dramatic death. Curtis went deep into the bush to see what he could find. We made the recovery, and we're still pouring over the video to see if we can espy its final moment.
- Trey Ratcliff
Click here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.
A Represa Billings é um dos maiores e mais importantes reservatórios de água da Região Metropolitana de São Paulo. A oeste, faz limite com a bacia hidrográfica da Guarapiranga e, ao sul, com a serra do Mar. Seus principais rios e córregos formadores são o Rio Grande ou Jurubatuba, Ribeirão Pires, Rio Pequeno, Rio Pedra Branca, Rio Taquacetuba, Ribeirão Bororé, Ribeirão Cocaia, Ribeirão Guacuri, Córrego Grota Funda e Córrego Alvarenga.
Por volta de 1910, o engenheiro Walter Charnley escolheu na Serra do Mar as escarpas de 640 m do Itapanhaú, que deságua em Bertioga, como local de um grande projeto de geração de energia. Em 1923, o engenheiro americano Asa White Kenney Billings preferiu que fosse represado o Rio Grande ou Jurubatuba e desviasse as águas através de um canal chamado Summit Control para o Córrego das Pedras, com curso serra abaixo.
A represa foi idealizada em 27 de março de 1925 pelo engenheiro Billings, empregado da extinta concessionária de energia elétrica Light, daí o nome. Inicialmente, a represa tinha o objetivo de armazenar água para gerar energia elétrica para a usina hidrelétrica Henry Borden, na cidade de Cubatão.
Em 1925, a Light iniciou a construção do dique do Rio das Pedras. A represa foi inundada em 1927 e a Light iniciou a construção do dique do Rio Grande, em 1937. Na década de 1940 foram construídas estações elevatórias de Pedreira e Traição para aumentar a vazão de água, trazendo problemas ambientais.
O projeto foi ampliado e, em 1949, foi planejado o novo reservatório (rebatizado de Billings) que receberia todas as águas do Alto Tietê. No início dos anos de 1980, foi construído uma barragem que separa o braço do Rio Grande do corpo principal do reservatório. Desde o ano 2000, há uma nova captação em um dos braços mais ao sul, denominado Taquacetuba.