One of the assets I am looking to acquire by the end of the year is a drone to help me capture aerial shots.
(It would certainly be a lot cheaper than renting a helicopter!)
I feel like this is a worth while investment (
the model I'm looking at costs about $650, plus I'd have to also buy a Go-Pro), but I am EXTREMELY nervous about crashing it.
I don't know if that fear will go away as I get more and more experience flying it, but I do have a solution to help ease those fears before I buy the actual drone.
This Labor Day weekend, I bought a cheap remote control helicopter and started practicing flying it.
The principles of flying it should still be the same as flying the drone, but the helicopter costs $40.
If I total the helicopter during one of my test flights (or, G-d forbid, it gets shot down by a miniature F-16 for crossing into miniature restricted airspace), I will not be out a considerable amount of money.
If anything, I would have gained a new lesson to help improve my flying skills.
This practice is known as
firing bullets before firing cannonballs, which is a great concept from Jim Collins'
Great By Choice. By using the cheaper helicopter to practice with over and over, I can nullify the risk of crashing the more expensive drone on its first flight.
The below video is a great explanation of the concept from Great by Choice:
Off we go, into the Wild Blue Yonder!
PS: I'll be at Baltimore Comic Con on Saturday, September 6. I hope to see you there!