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Ascom Quadcopter shot down by Pakistan came from India

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The "proof" here is claimed by ISPR. :lol: Seriously? ISPR?? Read the below link

Embarrassing disclosure: Drone shot down by Pakistani army made in China, says Chinese state media - The Economic Times

ISPR shamelessly uploads a video captured with their drone after shooting down their own police drone and you guys believe the baloney?


Chutiye .. The Indian company and its employees (which imported it),indian soldiers,13 mahar regiment board,Indian post... The video all is posted and available .. So instead of announcing what a giant Chutiya you are .. Better lay low and gtfo..:lol: you are embarassing yourself ..:lol:
 
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Indian media and lies got badly exposed. Indians should think 100 times before blaming us other wise we know How to expose them in front of whole world.
 
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... what are those pictures proving? It's showing an Indian flag. Why would India spy on it's own territory? If at all it was on a mission, where are the pics of pak posts? Not a thing from your side? What kind of an idiot activates the cam inside a room before setting the drone on a mission?

1. Drone has to fly from somewhere, it does not suddenly appear into the air. Thus the post from where it took off.
2. Pictures or rather the video of Pakistani Post is available at ISPR Page, survey of post has been omitted for obvious security reasons.
3. "What Kind of an Idiot" a lot of them apparently. They might have thought that deleting the images works but like I said earlier, PA will try to source the deleted images from on board storage.
 
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1. Drone has to fly from somewhere, it does not suddenly appear into the air. Thus the post from where it took off.
2. Pictures or rather the video of Pakistani Post is available at ISPR Page, survey of post has been omitted for obvious security reasons.
3. "What Kind of an Idiot" a lot of them apparently. They might have thought that deleting the images works but like I said earlier, PA will try to source the deleted images from on board storage.

ISPR should make the original footage available in public domain. That will give access to the original EXIF data and we will be able to verify the claim.

I checked the metadata last night. The ICC_Profiles were giving some weird timestamps, some 3.5 years old, some 6 years old. In any case, these images are cropped.
If they have the device and the recording, then it will have the original metadata too. Let's see that.

These things that we are talking about have hardly 10 minute endurance and 300 metres range without any obstruction, toys basically. I don't know why would you need a drone to see something that is 300 metres away, you will get better results using a binocular. If elevation is a concern, then you can raise one such thing high enough in the Indian side only, if the intended target is just 300 metres away, why do you have to send it across the border ?
 
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ISPR should make the original footage available in public domain. That will give access to the original EXIF data and we will be able to verify the claim.

I checked the metadata last night. The ICC_Profiles were giving some weird timestamps, some 3.5 years old, some 6 years old. In any case, these images are cropped.
If they have the device and the recording, then it will have the original metadata too. Let's see that.

LOL do you have any idea the size of MP4. or MOV format 5 mins video size made by quadcopteR ?? kabhe use kiya hey hahahahha.... oooo ******* MP4 MPEG2 or MOV or even AVI size 5 mins video made by qouadcopter will be more than 200 - 250 MB or even more... Facebook pe upload ki gaye video ka zara size daek... metaData dhoodaanay bheta hey HAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHA
 
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LOL do you have any idea the size of MP4. or MOV format 5 mins video size made by quadcopteR ?? kabhe use kiya hey hahahahha.... oooo ******* MP4 MPEG2 or MOV or even AVI size 5 mins video made by qouadcopter will be more than 200 - 250 MB or even more... Facebook pe upload ki gaye video ka zara size daek... metaData dhoodaanay bheta hey HAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHA

If you think it is a technical barrier to upload a 200-300MB file over the internet, then you might as well go back to grazing cows in the field, no point wasting time here.
 
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ISPR should make the original footage available in public domain. That will give access to the original EXIF data and we will be able to verify the claim.

I checked the metadata last night. The ICC_Profiles were giving some weird timestamps, some 3.5 years old, some 6 years old. In any case, these images are cropped.
If they have the device and the recording, then it will have the original metadata too. Let's see that.

These things that we are talking about have hardly 10 minute endurance and 300 metres range without any obstruction, toys basically. I don't know why would you need a drone to see something that is 300 metres away, you will get better results using a binocular. If elevation is a concern, then you can raise one such thing high enough in the Indian side only, if the intended target is just 300 metres away, why do you have to send it across the border ?

The data has to be salvaged from the drives, post-deletion which may be the reason that the metadata is screwed up. However, if they have access to accurate metadata, I hope they will be releasing it soon.
The DJI has a max range of 2km from what I know and although its limited range and hardly discreet profile make it a craft unsuited for recon ops, it can however take altitude and obtain more detailed in depth pictures of positions across the border without having to put an actual military drone in the line of fire and risking a diplomatic fiasco, its deniability and relative inexpensiveness make it a suitable solution for updating local post information about enemy strength, recent construction and mortar position. Which would allow me to direct much more accurate fire next time.
 
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literally anyone can buy and fly these.

was it for surveillance? sure...why not...it's cheap


i would be worried if terrorists decide to put bombs on these little quad copters and fly them into crowds :flame:
I was thinking about this yesterday, small sized high endurance uav's flying with ultrasonic transducers to maintain 5 to 10 feet altitude to attack Armored vehicles especially in a heavy concentration of Minefields.
 
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The data has to be salvaged from the drives, post-deletion which may be the reason that the metadata is screwed up. However, if they have access to accurate metadata, I hope they will be releasing it soon.
The DJI has a max range of 2km from what I know and although its limited range and hardly discreet profile make it a craft unsuited for recon ops, it can however take altitude and obtain more detailed in depth pictures of positions across the border without having to put an actual military drone in the line of fire and risking a diplomatic fiasco, its deniability and relative inexpensiveness make it a suitable solution for updating local post information about enemy strength, recent construction and mortar position. Which would allow me to direct much more accurate fire next time.

I don't know whether we are talking about the same device here, but this is the one that is available over here. Looks interesting, I am thinking of buying one..

Take a look : Flipkart :Robomart DJI Phantom Quadcopter

There it says 300 metres.
 
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The "proof" here is claimed by ISPR. :lol: Seriously? ISPR?? Read the below link

Embarrassing disclosure: Drone shot down by Pakistani army made in China, says Chinese state media - The Economic Times

ISPR shamelessly uploads a video captured with their drone after shooting down their own police drone and you guys believe the baloney?
You deserve 5 kilos of Cow dung for this brilliant post. I mean how could the Indians do anything wrong, obviously the ISPR disguised one of it's drones as a cow which walked into some IA regimental centre without suspicion and captured the images. Other images were probably beamed back by our spy pigeon which is under Indian custody.
Apparently some bombs were discovered on railway tracks in Indian Punjab, here the ISI was exposed once again when one of it's agent was pictured planting the bombs.

cowtrain.jpg
 
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Indians too embarrassed to admit that their army flies this 50cent drone...
 
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