Ever since I started flying dronesโfirst for fun, then full-on crashing my way through FPVโIโve been diving deeper into this world almost daily. I thought I was just learning to fly better. But what I didnโt expect was how often this hobby would lead me to stumble upon seriously fascinating things happening globally with drone technology.
And hereโs one that blew my mind:
โก๏ธ Japan Literally Captured Lightning Using a Drone
Yes, captured lightning.
NTT, a major telecom company in Japan, recently flew a specially designed drone up into storm clouds over Hamada City, Shimane Prefecture. The drone carried a 300-meter wire and acted like a modern-day Ben Franklin experiment. Only this time, instead of a kite and key, it was a tethered drone that actually summoned and survived a lightning strikeโon purpose.
Engineers are testing this to better understand lightning behavior, reduce blackout risks, and eventuallyโฆ harness lightning energy as a clean power source. Talk about next-level drone usage.
I fly drones in wide-open parks to practice my turns. These engineers are flying drones into thunderstorms and catching raw electricity from the sky.
Same tool. Completely different purpose.
๐งญ Drones Are Way More Than a Hobby
The deeper I get into the drone world, the more I realize: drones arenโt just for content creators, vloggers, or weekend FPV fans like me. Theyโre turning into essential tools for energy, medicine, public safety, and even disaster relief.
Let me give you a few more real-world examples:
- War zones: In Ukraine, drones are mapping out terrain, locating landmines, and feeding intelligence in real-timeโall while dodging electronic jamming.
- Medical delivery: In places like Rwanda and rural U.S. states, drones carry blood samples and medication to clinics that are hours away by road.
- Firefighting: Drones now help control wildfires by dropping fire-starting capsules to create controlled burnsโthink strategic fire against fire.
- Search and rescue: Police in the U.S. and Japan use drones to find missing persons or assess damage after earthquakes before responders arrive.
- Commercial delivery: Walmart and Deliveroo are already flying products to peopleโs backyards. Itโs happening. Right now.
๐ Why This Matters (Even for Us Hobbyists)
Every time I practice flips or film cinematic b-roll over a rice field, I remind myself: this is just one piece of what drones can do. Whatโs inspiring is that the same technology in my hands is also being used to save lives, fight fires, and possibly even power our cities in the future.
So yeah, I crashed into a few trees this week.
But I also read about a drone that caught lightning. And suddenly, my little FPV world feels like part of something much bigger.
โ๏ธ Curious? Keep Going.
Iโll keep flying. Crashing. Learning. Sharing.
And if youโre reading this and you thought drones were just toys or tools for techy YouTubersโthink again. The sky is literally the limit. And sometimesโฆ that sky is full of lightning.








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