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⚖ Operations · § 107.15; § 107.49Q-203 · 203 of 251

During a construction progress flight, a remote pilot notices the drone's downward-facing obstacle sensor is reporting intermittent errors in the controller app. The current flight has 4 minutes of mission remaining and the drone is at 200 feet AGL over an open graded area. What is the correct action?

Why →
Part 107 places on the remote PIC the continuous duty to determine the aircraft is in a condition for safe operation. An intermittent sensor fault is a material change to the pre-flight condition the pilot accepted. The correct response is to land, diagnose, and either resolve or abort. Continuing a flight with a known fault transfers risk to the next phase of flight where landing becomes mandatory.
The trap →
The reasoning in Choice B sounds logical (sensor is not active at altitude), but every flight ends with a landing, and the landing is exactly when the faulty sensor matters most. Deferring diagnosis until landing phase is the opposite of sound aeronautical decision-making.
SOURCE → 14 CFR § 107.15; § 107.49CHECKED APR 21ACS V.C.K1MED
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