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Learn how Visual Observers (VOs) protect your drone flight! Master VO roles, responsibilities, communication, tools, and real-world scenarios in this must-read Wingman Wednesday guide.
🚀 Why Every Great Drone Flight Needs a Great Visual Observer
If you think the Pilot-in-Command (PIC) is the only critical role on your drone mission — think again.
A well-trained Visual Observer (VO) can mean the difference between a safe flight… and a crash that makes headlines.
In this week’s Wingman Wednesday spotlight, we’ll show you exactly how VOs keep the flight safe, the real-world language they should use, and the tools and tricks pros rely on.
We’ll even share true stories of VO mistakes — so you won’t make them.
✋ Role & Purpose of the Visual Observer
A Visual Observer (VO) acts as the PIC’s dedicated set of eyes — maintaining Visual Line of Sight (VLOS) and scanning for hazards both in the air and on the ground.
👉 Under FAA Part 107 (and mirrored in many global regulations), VOs must:
- Maintain continuous communication with the PIC
- Visually track the drone’s attitude, altitude, direction, and hazards
Why? Because the PIC is busy flying the aircraft and managing mission objectives — while the VO adds a critical layer of safety and situational awareness.
🛠 Key Responsibilities & Pre-Flight Contributions
Main Duties of a VO:
✅ Maintain VLOS — never lose sight of the drone
✅ Perform a systematic airspace scan every 10 seconds (use clock-pattern: 12 → 3 → 6 → 9 → back to 12)
✅ Detect hazards — aircraft, birds, obstacles, ground personnel
✅ Communicate clearly — clock-based callouts: “Bird at 2 o’clock, 50 ft above path”
✅ Call safety actions — tell PIC when evasive action or failsafe is needed
✅ Manage bystanders — shield the PIC from distractions
Pre-Flight:
✅ Attend the mission briefing — know the mission, hazards, comms plan, and emergency procedures
✅ Inspect communication gear (radios, headsets)
✅ Confirm VO-PIC positioning (typically standing at 9 or 3 o’clock relative to PIC for best visual and comms flow)
🎯 Skills, Training & Tools
Essential VO Traits:
- 🔍 Sharp situational awareness
- 🎯 Focused attention — scanning methodically, not distracted
- 🗣️ Clear communication — short, direct, descriptive
- 🚀 Proactivity — anticipate hazards before they become emergencies
Training Recommendations:
✅ Listen to Sky Commander Duet – Talk the Flight (Pilot and VO)
✅ In-depth Podcast (Season 2, Episode 8 of Sky Commander Academy)
✅ In-depth Podcast (Season 2, Episode 7 of Sky Commander Academy)
✅ In-depth Podcast (Season 1, Episode 37 of Sky Commander Academy)
Recommended Tools & Attire:
- Two-way radios/headsets — concise, fast comms
- Sunglasses & brimmed hat — cut glare and protect eyes
- High-visibility vest — when operating in public
- Clipboard or tablet — for checklists & hazard log
- Backup comm device — for failsafe comms
🚦 Real-World Scenarios & Communication Samples
Scenario 1: Bird Flock Ahead
VO: “PIC, bird flock at 2 o’clock, 200 ft, descending toward path.”
PIC: “Roger — vectoring right 10 m, climbing +5 ft.”
Scenario 2: Drone Drifts Out of Sight
PIC: “Drone at risk of losing sight — zoom out camera.”
VO: “Cannot locate — last seen 3 o’clock, 250 ft.”
PIC: “Initiating return-to-home.”
Scenario 3: Distracted by Bystander
VO: “Pilot distracted, person approaching at 4 o’clock — clearing path.”
PIC: “Returning attention. Thanks, VO.”
Scenario 4: Unexpected Obstacle
VO: “Tower crane at 11 o’clock, 150 ft — altitude ~10 ft above.”
PIC: “Descending 15 ft. Copy crane location.”
🚨 VO Mistakes That Made Headlines (Don’t Be That VO)
✅ Police drone collided with a Cessna:
VO was watching the video feed — not the sky. Result? A collision. Rule #1: Eyes on the sky, not the screen.
✅ Helicopter-drone mid-air collision:
VO failed to detect a helicopter entering the airspace. Active scanning is essential, especially in low airspace operations.
✅ Post-Flight Debrief & VO Responsibilities
After the mission, the VO must:
- Support the PIC with data review — confirm logs and times
- Log any hazards or near-misses for continuous improvement
- Inspect and store VO equipment
- Discuss communication performance — what worked, what didn’t
- Recommend procedural improvements if needed
- Self-assess for fatigue or stress impacts
🧩 How a VO Adds Value to the Crew
A professional VO:
- Enhances the crew’s safety margin
- Shields the PIC from unnecessary distractions
- Expands situational awareness beyond the drone’s sensors
- Ensures regulatory compliance and protects the company from liability
💡 Pro Tips, Fun Trivia & VO Nuggets
✅ Clock-pattern scanning prevents tunnel vision — every 10 seconds
✅ VOs often use brief codes like “Bird @ 2-200-descending” to speed comms
✅ The VO role comes from aviation CRM — think of them as the drone’s co-pilot
✅ If you need a break: “Taking a 2-minute scan break — ready to resume.”
✅ Sunglasses are OK — but only if they don’t compromise your ability to track drone orientation
🧠 Final Takeaways: How to Be a Pro VO
If you want to be a great Visual Observer, or hire one, remember this:
😎 Master clear, calm communication
🔎 Keep your eyes sweeping — methodical, disciplined
✔️ Engage fully in pre- and post-flight safety protocols
🚧 Learn from real-world mistakes — and build a safety-first mindset
🚀 What’s Next?
👉 Want to see how your Payload Operator can take your flights to the next level? Stay tuned — next Wingman Wednesday, we’ll break it down!
👉 QUESTION: What’s the toughest situation YOU’VE faced as a VO? Share your story in the comments below!


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