Will passenger drones change BC skiing?

iLLbiLLy

Active member
There's been a lot of recent hype around new "drones" (quadcopters) that are capable of carrying a human passenger.


It's easy to see what a game changer this could be (for better or worse) as a mode of backcountry transportation. Fly the drone to the top of a peak and then set auto-pilot to meet you back at the bottom. Basicly like your own personal heli service. Brave new world were living in...
 
With the amount of variables involved in mountain/high altitude flying, I personally would want a human at the controls. At this point in drone/autopilot technology at least. Maybe in the future, who knows. Cool idea for sure though.

What happens when there is an electrical error within the AI system and it falls out of the sky
 
13598235:Jaybrtn said:
With the amount of variables involved in mountain/high altitude flying, I personally would want a human at the controls. At this point in drone/autopilot technology at least. Maybe in the future, who knows. Cool idea for sure though.

What happens when there is an electrical error within the AI system and it falls out of the sky

Ya, obviously it's not quite there yet. But, the quadcopter industry is progressing at a breakneck pace so who know what will happen in 5-10 years. I definitely think the passenger would need to be responsible for flying to the top, but the drone could handle getting back down (worse case at least no one dies if it fucks up).

Maybe they'll add an emergency parachute system or something for catastrophic failures.
 
those drones look like a good solution for traffic jams in cities, maybe in 50 years that technology will advanced enough for heliskiing.

this is still the coolest way to get up a mountain in a relatively cheap way tho

 
13598256:iLLbiLLy said:
Ya, obviously it's not quite there yet. But, the quadcopter industry is progressing at a breakneck pace so who know what will happen in 5-10 years. I definitely think the passenger would need to be responsible for flying to the top, but the drone could handle getting back down (worse case at least no one dies if it fucks up).

Maybe they'll add an emergency parachute system or something for catastrophic failures.

What would be more likely is the passenger in charge of flying it up would have to be a licensed pilot in that category of aircraft, not just joe schmo who happened to have the money to buy one. But then again, who knows what kind of technology will be available in the future.

It's a sick idea, but I think we're a long way off, especially when there are passengers involved and when the FAA moves like molasses to begin with.
 
13598270:Alvaro said:
those drones look like a good solution for traffic jams in cities, maybe in 50 years that technology will advanced enough for heliskiing.

this is still the coolest way to get up a mountain in a relatively cheap way tho


Dope AF
 
I think the autonomy will eliminate a lot of the human error. The only time Google and tesla's autonomous vehicles have crashed is because of an error of another driver. I just hope they plan on making bigger cockpits. I will not fit in that thing haha
 
13598270:Alvaro said:
those drones look like a good solution for traffic jams in cities, maybe in 50 years that technology will advanced enough for heliskiing.

this is still the coolest way to get up a mountain in a relatively cheap way tho


I think the technology will be there way quicker than 50 years (probably closer to 5). I think the regulation and legality will be more of a blocking issue.
 
Honestly, this probably will be long in the future, these would have a hard time operating at such thin air where most back country skiing takes place. I don't think it would have an effect.
 
13598459:ChristianB said:
Honestly, this probably will be long in the future, these would have a hard time operating at such thin air where most back country skiing takes place. I don't think it would have an effect.

With the exception of colorado, I'd say most backcountry terrain is below 10,000 ft (at least in the US).

I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure most the heli-ski operations in alaska (valdese, haines) operate in areas below 6000 ft.

I know from experience that smaller quadcopters are fine around 10k feet. Of course you lose some performance but I'm not sure it would be a deal breaker.
 
13598496:HAMNATION said:
NO but you can buy a sic sled for like 4 g's

Take it from someone who has two "sic" sleds...

1: 4k isn't going to get you anything that sick. You'll be lucky to find an 09/10 RMK/Summit 800 with under 2.5k miles in good shape. And then, you'll probably blow the top end within 500 miles and need to drop another 1.5k into it.

2: You'll buy it for skiing and then realize that it's actually REALLY hard to double up on top of anything worth skiing. By the time you're actually good enough to do so, you'll be having too much fun joyriding the son of bitch to actually want to ski.
 
It reminds me of that section of Art of Flight where they got in that big argument with the Heli pilot about wherever they were trying to go. It seems like a lot of people will likely die if it were just up to Jerry and the Boys where they want to ski.
 
13598494:iLLbiLLy said:
With the exception of colorado, I'd say most backcountry terrain is below 10,000 ft (at least in the US).

I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure most the heli-ski operations in alaska (valdese, haines) operate in areas below 6000 ft.

I know from experience that smaller quadcopters are fine around 10k feet. Of course you lose some performance but I'm not sure it would be a deal breaker.

Yeah, but I think it being either a quad or double copter its rotors are not as powerful as a normal heli. Personally doubt this kind of technology is anywhere near in the future.
 
13598558:iLLbiLLy said:
Take it from someone who has two "sic" sleds...

1: 4k isn't going to get you anything that sick. You'll be lucky to find an 09/10 RMK/Summit 800 with under 2.5k miles in good shape. And then, you'll probably blow the top end within 500 miles and need to drop another 1.5k into it.

2: You'll buy it for skiing and then realize that it's actually REALLY hard to double up on top of anything worth skiing. By the time you're actually good enough to do so, you'll be having too much fun joyriding the son of bitch to actually want to ski.

You can get a decent skidoo for under 5 g's if you look. and if you ride Canadian you can actually ride some dope lines at places like Montezuma.

If you just want to shuttle runs even an 02/04 670 will work for some things if your not just going out sled-necking.
 
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