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Abnormal & Emergency Situations

The Remote PIC must be prepared to handle equipment malfunctions, environmental surprises, and full-blown emergencies. This section covers the major failure modes and the reporting requirements that follow.

Emergency Authority

In an in-flight emergency, the Remote PIC may deviate from any Part 107 rule to the extent necessary to meet the emergency. Upon FAA request, you must submit a written report explaining the deviation.

Lost Link (Abnormal — Not Emergency)

A lost link is an interruption or loss of the control link between the control station and the aircraft. The aircraft executes pre-set lost link procedures and behaves predictably.

Flyaway (Emergency)

A flyaway begins like a lost link, but the aircraft does not execute its pre-set procedures — it operates unpredictably or beyond control. This is a genuine emergency.

Loss of GPS

Battery Fires

Lithium metal and lithium-ion batteries pose a significant hazard. Both are:

During thermal runaway, lithium metal cells can release a flammable electrolyte and molten lithium with a large pressure pulse. Once a battery is in thermal runaway, water alone will not stop it — get away from the aircraft and let it burn out where safe.

Contingency Planning

Flight Termination Points (FTPs) — the last-resort option — should:

FAA Accident Reporting (10 Days)

The Remote PIC must report any sUAS accident to the FAA within 10 calendar days if any of these thresholds are met:

NTSB Notification (Immediate)

Per 49 CFR § 830, the NTSB must be notified immediately — not within 10 days — of certain events. Memorize the mnemonic PFACTION:

For sUAS specifically, NTSB requires immediate notification when: