I don’t think so. I did some quick googling (I don’t zip line so I don’t know what ropes used) and I got 1200’ of 1/4 nylon was 14 lbs. I used this website to see all the payload capacities of popular drones, and it seems you wouldn’t be approaching that capability to carry that until the $10,000+ models. Payload capacity is a huge issue just from the drones not being engineered for carrying weight, just themselves and a lightweight camera most times.
Edit: Well actually I suppose you wouldn’t have to mount the spool to the drone, you could leave that weight on the other end and let the drone drag the line, then it’s now a question of how much line that drone could pull before it’d get bogged down. Not 1000’ though, I think there’ll be too much going on up there with the drone,rope, and physics to get that far.
When selecting a drone to purchase, one consideration that often gets pushed towards the back of your mind is the drone’s payload capacity. Once you start
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