Fighter Jet And Drone In 520mph Near-Miss

Library image of a F-15 jet (Picture: US Department of Defense).
A police officer was forced to quickly steer a drone away from the path of an F-15 fighter jet travelling at nearly 520mph, a report has revealed.
The officer was convinced there would be a collision as the military jet came into view and then banked right while flying above Throwleigh in Devon, on January 16.
The Airprox board, which looks into near-misses, reported the 6kg drone was flying at an altitude of around 300ft when the operator heard a fast jet approaching.
"He descended the drone as quickly as possible," the report said.
"The jet came into view from right-to-left and seemed to pass by the drone at the same altitude; it looked like the jet was within 200m laterally of the drone.
"Once the jet was in view it started banking to the right and he honestly believed it was going to collide with the drone. The jet continued, and was followed a few seconds later by a second jet."
The police drone pilot had completed a task and was returning to the landing site when the incident occurred at around 12pm.
The F-15 pilot, who was flying at an altitude of 500ft, could not see the drone but the drone pilot said the risk of a collision was "high".
The Airprox board has now discussed whether the replacement for the Centralised Aviation Data Service - a planning service which helps the military plan routes through UK airspace - could also incorporate information from NATS' (National Air Traffic Services) Drone Assist App to "contribute to a unified traffic management system".








