parrot ar drone in pakistan

Parrot DISCO - Tutorial #1 - Setup Parrot DISCO - Tutorial #3 - Take Off Parrot DISCO - Tutorial #4 - Piloting Parrot DISCO - Tutorial #6 - Landing Parrot DISCO FPV Reviews - page 2Both countries have been quite shitty at drone development, because:Pakistan has budgetary constraints. The only credible UCAV they have at this point is the Burraq:Oops, my mistake, that’s a Chinese CH3 drone. Here’s the Pakistani Burraq.I see what you did there, right?India didn’t really care about a MALE/HALE drone program, and just picked up the Israeli Herons and Harpies instead. The Rustom 1 and 2 work, but no one has any serious plans for them.“General, we can develop combat, surveillance or ELINT variants … what did you have in mind?”“ … well, it would look pretty cool in an airshow …”If India decided to become serious about drone development, though, it could produce a drone program with more funds than Pakistan’s entire military budget of $8 billion in a blink.

(The 36 Dassault Rafales we just purchased for shits and giggles costed about the same).So yeah, India can either compete with Pakistani drones (as it is doing now), or it can choose to become serious about developing drones.I suspect that it cannot. But that doesn't matter. India is by far the world’s largest arms importer. Everything that it has is imported, why not some armed drones too.Then, once India opens up its purse strings to spend the billions it does not have, Pakistan can shop around for some more to “restore balance”. This cycle continues, ensuring that the decision makers in the army, their political patrons, foreign countries and middle men get richer while “patriots” engage in pissing contests on social media.Meanwhile millions remain the starving, illiterate, diseased relics of what should really have been the national priorities of these two “great” countries.Pakistan is among the handful of countries with armed UAVs. Pakistan's Burraq UAV is capable of carrying two air-to-ground missiles, has a service ceiling of around 15000 feet and an endurance of 8–10 hours.

The UAV's operational range is thought to be around 350km through LOS communication.It is equipped with two ASMs and a laser designator and has a payload capacity of 100kg.Except the IAI Heron, India has no capable operational UAV to speak of (except quadcopter UAVs) and certainly no armed UAV. This gives Pakistan an edge in UAV technology and while the Burraq is not India-centric, there is nothing stopping Pakistan from using it in a conflict with India where it may be able to destroy Indian posts and keep an eye on troop positions while being a nuisance for the Indians.The question is silly for more reasons than I’d care to elaborate. Pakistan does not have the scientific and industrial backbone to compete with India on any level.Here’s a ranking of the scientific output of most countries in the world from Scopus data: SJR - International Science RankingThis is India (with its peer group):And here is Pakistan:India is a country where an entirely private team of mainly IITians can bring to bear technological expertise to design robotic lunar landers and rovers with French high-precision cameras.

Designing a UAV is a far easier task in comparison.All the Pakistani military deep-state can do is squeeze its agrarian population and raise debt to buy foreign (initially American and now Chinese) hardware, rename it with borrowed terms from Islamic Arab lore and, yes, spend a little on the paint.The industrial capabilities of the Pakistani state are so abysmal that if it weren’t for their anal-retentive military establishment, Pakistanis would import even their tractors from India because Pakistan doesn’t have the industrial bench strength for making them.
ar drone parrot brasilNot even the effin’ tractors!!!
ar drone 2 zubehörAnother Quoran has specifically taken apart the claims of “Pakistani” UAVs, so I’d save the garden variety fruitcakes from Pakistan reading this the blushes.
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EDIT:I noticed that the above comparison of research output was done by comparing citable papers in all fields of study, which include STEM fields but could also include papers on subjects like Quranic remedies or other such religious codswallop which is a favourite pastime of many Pakistani “academics”.So, to get a better estimate of the abilities of Pakistani engineers and scientists in the specific field of Aerospace Engineering (relevant to making drones/ UAVs), let’s look at the Scopus database filtered by this subject:Here’s India again with its peer group:And no surprises for where Pakistan features in the list:So, India publishes a whopping 13.8 times the number of Aerospace Engineering papers than are published from Pakistan and also has 2.7 times the H-index of Pakistan. In other words, the papers Pakistan produces are worth a lot less too.EDIT 2:Apparently, this answer is a Pakistani wingnut magnet. I don’t mind wingnuts of any persuasion, so long as the comments are not abusive.

Playful banter etc is ok, personal abuse not so much. I will delete any abusive comments. I have difficulty believing that Pakistani drones have the endurance at payload to be a serious threat to India’s security.I would be quite surprised if there was a Pakistani drone that could effect more than two hours of flight with any battle capable payload.Maybe at high altitude, with favorable wind conditions Pakistani drones can have longer duration flights, but they won’t get up there with higher payload.This could change if Pakistan is able to purchase systems from the US or China. Download, and you're ready to have fun With a completely friendly user interface, a simplified first log in and automatic recognition of your connected drones and accessories, everything has been thought of to let Free Flight Mini expand your options for playing and experiences. Change your minidrone's flight settings and check the remaining battery and flight time. Let your imagination run riot and blow your friends away...