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Question for the Experts on Here

My father was the same. He built the house. I never saw an electrician, plumber and nobody worked on the cars he owned. When he was 13 he built from scraps the first radio station in Vermont from his home somewhere around 1917 or so.
Whats always puzzled me, is the trouble shooting part, and work a rounds how one learns that part ? I can see the mechanical part, but with no formal training how many years it must take to understand those concepts is quite frankly beyond me, l guess at first alot is found by chance ? Seeing as I'm a late starter maybe before I die I'll get that part ? Wish my dad was still here, he never graduated high school, but there was nothing he couldnt fix on his own give him a lock and he could make a key by hand, he would have made a good crook if he had a few days to break in ? This would have been right up his alley
To clarify it was the first station telephoned to another station in wheeling west va. not the 1st station.
 
My dad once told me that to become a professional in any field, one would need to have at least ten thousand hours of direct study or practice in a given field or sport. 10,000 hours is essentially one year of full time 40 hour-a-week employment for five years straight. If we think about it, we do 12 years of school then if we want to get a degree, there are a further 4 years of direct study in a given field at collage to reach a goal. Sports is same thing, a kid might play football through high school then go to collage for four more years to play there before he can make it to the 'pros'

Drones are like an iceberg. They are deceptive in their size and scope of complexity, and as automation increases, this only broadens the underlying complexity. I look at a modern drone as having at least three major areas of complexity that each require at least a 'four year degree of practice' and; depending on the person, the importance of each of the three professions necessary for success can be placed in various orders of importance and they are: Flight Operations, Photography and/or Cinematography and Systems Maintenance.

Each of those fields requires a lot of study to get your head wrapped around them and there are very few shortcuts (this forum may be one). Many of us are lucky in that we came from an RC world which; pretty much gives one an overwhelming understanding of flight operations and maintenance for the most part. But that is only part of the equation as understanding and using cameras even as simple as the ones on our drones is a very deep field and not one that can be picked up and or mastered in a month or even a year. Basically, the three skill sets are equivalent to three separate four year degrees.

About 6 months after I learned to fly RC I was asked by my club to be the selected introduction member that would spend time with any new pilots to help get them acquainted to the club and AMA rules and get them flying. Later that summer a new member shows up at a meeting and we were introduced and set up a field meeting. He was an airline pilot so I thought that perhaps he would take to the controls fairly quick. Long story short, he didn't. He was one of the slowest to learn, worst pilots I had ever seen. I distinctly remember during one flight were I was trying to get him to make the base and final turns (where he always failed), he said "whoever thought of such foolishness"

He didn't have the respect for the hobby required to give him enough intellectual curiosity to even apply himself to make a "toy" airplane fly. Hmm, go figure. Within three months, we never saw him again. Over the 42 years I have been flying it is this very attitude and ones like it that keep flyers from succeeding and having an enjoyable experience in the hobby.

I think the key to this hobby is the same, if we decide to apply ourselves to acquire the skills necessary and accept the challenges, and go into it with an open and curious attitude and an understanding of the distance of our journey, then experience and mastery will follow.
 
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The airline pilot thing was amusing, reminding me of a time back in Iraq where a bunch of aerospace employees were placed on temporary duty operating and servicing a 10’ wingspan UAV. These people were all specialist and engineers in one way or another with full scale fighters, helicopters, and military transports. Many of them had zero respect for the drone they were tasked with operating, calling it a “toy/model airplane”.

As I worked for the company that designed and made that “toy or model airplane” I had to remind them that few “toy airplanes” paid their operators $3k-$4k/week to fly them while generating an additional $30k-$50k/month/per operator in clear profit to the company. From my perspective that little plane was a very successful and productive commercial aircraft.
 
Yep I could totally see that happening. You know, if we're Lucky Pat, and stay healthy for a while, we will see the day that a "toy" airplane gets into a simulated dogfight at Top Gun or Red Flag with something like an F35 or F22 and beats it. Wouldn't you like to be in that debriefing? ?
 
My dad once told me that to become a professional in any field, one would need to have at least ten thousand hours of direct study or practice in a given field or sport. 10,000 hours is essentially one year of full time 40 hour-a-week employment for five years straight. If we think about it, we do 12 years of school then if we want to get a degree, there are a further 4 years of direct study in a given field at collage to reach a goal. Sports is same thing, a kid might play football through high school then go to collage for four more years to play there before he can make it to the 'pros'

as someone who picked up a bass guitar and was playing the c circuit bars,
[within 1 year] earning a living not too shabby when live music was a thing..
the rule my "teacher" had was every 5 min "on stage"..
requires 1000 hours of rehearsal each, with knuckles wrapped repeatedly for errors of form, mechanics and posture...
all the while keeping in mind, practices makes permanent easier than perfect,
as the twig is bent the tree will grow..
 
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as someone who picked up a bass guitar and was playing the c circuit bars,
[within 1 year] earning a living not too shabby when live music was a thing..
the rule my "teacher" had was every 5 min "on stage"..
requires 1000 hours of rehearsal each, with knuckles wrapped repeatedly for errors of form, mechanics and posture...
all the while keeping in mind, practices makes permanent easier than perfect,
as the twig is bent the tree will grow..
Does your drone sing,,,play music?Sorry couldn't resist. t's just these times Keith
 

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