This is a summary of 6 important things a drone can do!
Humanitarian aid & disaster relief
Healthcare
Weather forecasting
Infrastructure development
Personal transportation
Live entertainment
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Humanitarian aid & disaster relief
Drones have proven to be very helpful during disasters like earthquakes, tornadoâs, floods,⊠Thanks to the high mobility and the fact that they are so fast to deploy. Drones have saved thousands of lives. This by surveying the affected areas and locating people in need.
But this is not where the story ends. After locating the persons in need. Most emergency response drone teams have drones that are equipped with tools to deliver actual help! This can be in de form of blankets, medicines or phones.
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Healthcare
Todayâs science and medical knowledge is more sophisticated than ever before. Weâve found vaccines and cures for diseases we didnât held for possible a couple of years ago.
A problem that occurs is that a large part of the world doesnât have access to these life saving solutions. One of the roots of this problem is the fact that a lot of people live in inaccessible and isolated areas around the world. Which makes it a difficult task to get these solutions to those people by truck or plane.
Drones that fly over these areas and simply drop the lifesaving items in a box with a parachute attached to it are a simple and relatively cheap solution.
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Weather forecasting
Weather now is tracked by stationary measurement facilities. This gives weather scientists no room to follow weather developments. Drones allow us to physically follow these weather developments.
In addition to aerial vehicles, water-based unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) are changing the way data is gathered. Saildrone has developed an autonomous sailboat that collects oceanic and atmospheric data from the ocean surface.
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Infrastructure development
Drones have proven to be helpful in the whole management and planning process of infrastructure development. Drones can also become a part of the story when we are talking about the physical development of infrastructure.
Here is a very cool video of drones actually building something
Companies like Amazon, Uber, Brussels Airlines,⊠all invest in research and development for personal aerial transportation without pilots. Aka drone taxiâs.
Itâs a difficult task, transporting people with a drone, safely. But we believe that the drone world isnât that far away from realizing this dream. Thanks to the investments of the big and small companies.
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Live entertainment
Drones have already massively changed the way we watch television, Netflix or other video content. By eliminating the high costs of helicopter based aerial photography. But drones can also be of a great visual aid to the entertainment sector. Think about the drone light shows from Intel. The cost is of these shows is usually lower than the firework shows they usually replace (almost no noise is a big advantage for all the animals).
We were talking with one of our friends who is a professional drone pilot specialized in photogrammetry.
We were talking with one of our friends who is a professional drone pilot specialized in photogrammetry. We were all amazed and interested in the special skill set that is required for these kind of missions. Then we started wondering which ways are the most popular among pilots to make money with drones. Before we realized it we wrote a blog article, hope you enjoy it!
Aerial photography
Aerial surveying
Reselling drones
Inspection & Mapping
Drone delivery
Search and rescue
Precision agriculture
Train new pilots
Aerial photography
Aerial photography is in essence the art of shooting pictures with your drone. Before the arrival of drones in the aerial photography landscape. Aerial photos were mainly taken by helicopters and balloons, this kind of photography is very expensive compared to the drone aerial photography we know nowadays!
This is one of the most popular ways to make money among drone pilots today because of the availability of information, equipment and jobs.
Aerial surveying
Aerial surveying is a method of collecting geomatics or other imagery by using airborne vehicles. This can be done using different types of technology like photography, radar, laser,⊠Typical types of data collected include aerial photography, Lidar and geophysical data.
There is a wide variety where aerial surveying is used for:
Archaeology
Fishery
Geophysics
Hydrocarbon exploration
Land surveys
Mining exploration
Reselling drones
When you decide to become a drone reseller, you create a physical drone store or an online platform. You then attract customers to this location in order to convince them to buy one of your drones. Together with the drones you sell you can offer services like drone insurance, repair and maintenance to differentiate yourself from other drone resellers.
There is also the option of becoming an authorized DJI dealer, this means you can offer your customers DJI warranty. If you are not an authorized DJI dealer your products are not subject to DJI warranty services.
Inspection and mapping
Photogrammetry is done by letting a drone fly autonomously along a flight path. When the drone is flying the path it is taking overlapping photos. From these photos there are measurements that can made to for example calculate the volume of your inventory.
There is a wide variety of software and education available to help you with photogrammetry.
Drone delivery
For the grand public one the most exciting aspects of drones is the delivery of packages. These packages will be delivered by autonomous flying drones carrying medical supplies, food, or just your regular Amazon package.
This is an aspect of drone flying where a lot of big companies like Amazon invest a lot of money in to become the first to have a commercial viable service. We will dedicate a whole blog article to this soon.
Search and rescue
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Whenever there is a disaster, a war, or just a missing hiker. Drones can be used to scan huge areas in a very effective and efficient way.
There is a cool video from Youtuber Mrwhosetheboss that shows what Nokia has been up to lately with this specific application of drones.
Precision agriculture
We see them rising from the ground at a rapid pass everywhere around the world, drone schools. Places where experienced pilots can train new drone enthusiasts to guarantee a safe airspace. In a lot of countries a license is required to fly a drone like a drivers license. Even though this is not yet required in all countries around the world, this will probably happen soon.
Hungry for more information on this subject? Make sure to subscribe to our content to get an update when we publish a detailed article on one of these 8 subjects!
Train new pilots
We see them rising from the ground at a rapid pass everywhere around the world, drone schools. Places where experienced pilots can train new drone enthusiasts to guarantee a safe airspace. In a lot of countries a license is required to fly a drone like a drivers license. Even though this is not yet required in all countries around the world, this will probably happen soon.
Hungry for more information on this subject? Make sure to subscribe to our content to get an update when we publish a detailed article on one of these 8 subjects!
When we stand up for ourselves, we also stand up for you
This blogpost is an opinion piece and look behind the curtain on why we believe in open drone ecosystems, on why the name of our drone management platform has a large portion of the word 'connect' in it, and why we fight against barriers to market access. We believe that useful applications should be enabled rather than having drones controlled by some dominant players or/and even prevented.
We also argue that drones - as the disruptive technology they are - deserve the best possible support and environment to thrive in. That support will be achieved when flights are managed through an open, connected system. Not by a closed one. We understand what the reasons of enforcing a closed system are. Those reasons however do not serve the cause of any drone pilot, authority or industry. They are only serving the benefit of one or two players, and their investors.
Let us guide you through our story.
On September 3rd 2019, the Belgian Civil Aviation Authority (BCAA) decided that 9 days later, a software application called Droneguide Pro, would become the only possible method to notify the highest risk drone flights and to get derogations on otherwise unauthorised flights. It came around the same time that the BCAA launched a digital way to register aircraft, including drones and created a drone council.
Up until now and for sure until that fateful day, we have been supporting hundreds of Belgian pilots and companies since the launch of the actual drone regulations in May 2016 by sending their flight notifcations for the same category of flights smoothly to the BCAA. We were given no prior notice of this decision and were not consulted on how we could connect our platform to the new software solution.
Not only did we - and still do - support Belgian pilots for supporting their drone operations from A to Z with our software application since 2015, we also helped multiple companies get their Operations Manual approved, in which IDRONECT is described as the management tool, including to send notifications.
So we decided - obviously - to oppose this decision, in order to prevent that our efforts and our economic livelihood is put in danger, and that our users are being forced into a direction against their will.
For all transparency we like to describe here what our arguments are, as well as the history of our product.
Let's start of with some history:
We started our endeavour in the summer of 2015 when it became clear that drone users need some help in dealing with all of the tasks that are required before flying the unmanned devices. More than 80% of drone pilots are new to aviation, and aviation rules are difficult, even for aviation professionals. So we created Dronelog.be and showed it quite soon to the Belgian aviation authorities who gladly saw our efforts as an enabling tool, also for their own possible use.
Drones do not follow the same logic as traditional aircraft. The technological advances made by the drone sector are so fast, that we don't know yet what will be flying in the sky in let's say 12 months. Large airplanes like the A380 or B787 take years and years to develop and to get operational. Traditional aviation laws also sometimes take 5 years or more from idea to actually being implemented. When we started in 2015, a DJI Phantom 3 was the go-to drone for the serious recreational pilot. Now, 4 years later, even the improved Phantom 4 has become a relic, as we are witnessing and observing tests with UAV's carrying passengers and drones delivering pizza's. The drone industry itself by means of its users and developers largely outpaces the regulators, the authorities and the general public. In order to give this great industry the best possible chance we offered our solution to the authority for free, we did not want any barrier that would hinder the great potential. Why ? Because we believe that the drone industry can only grow if it grows in a safe and secure way without barriers holding it back.
When we launched our improved platform IDRONECT on February 2nd 2016, we truly had a world's premier. We managed a drone flight at what we now know as DronePort. A pilot created a drone flight plan,which was approved by the airport commander and subsequently by the aviation authorities. All were connected on one platform and the flight got approval in a matter of minutes. The original flight had to be cancelled due to the rain, so we made a new flight plan live in front of all tech-journalists that were abundantly present. The flight was tracked live within a pre-formatted geofence. We were way ahead in the process. Happy faces all over, authorities clapped and praised our efforts, live radio-shows and TV-interviews followed.
We showed that the industry itself could come up with a solution that filled a need for all parties involved. The industry itself described the need and came up with a good solution. The only solution ? Of course not. But at least one that at that time enabled industry growth. In a safe way and fully compliant with all regulatory requirements.
Our positive inertia lead us to win the Drone Hero 2016 award, received out of the hands of then Alexander Decroo - the Minister responsible for digitalisation. His speech on the benefits of peer-to-peer economy and sharing of knowledge and value still resonates in our ears until today. We were at the right time at the right place. Were we ?
Little did we know that our moments of TV-fame in February 2016, awakened forces that before were unaware of our existence.
Soon after winning our award, we got news from the BCAA that it could no longer use our platform since it used it for free (in fact what it could do with our solution was approve or disapprove a flight by clicking a button, depending on the flight scenario and risk analysis that was presented by the drone pilot. This was before the actual drone regulations introduced a system with derogations and notifications). Even when the authority made clear that it was not using our platform as the only method but merely for the drone pilots who used it, it did not matter. It had to stop using us. Who decided this, and based on what ?
In the 18 months that followed, we saw the birth of Belgian drone rules, with flight classes, licenses, derogations, notifications and so on. We signed up more users than ever, as the need for support was high. Drone pilots used IDRONECT to create flight scenarios, analyse risks, check weather and notams, all by using realtime data and ADQ charts, and send their flight notifications to the authorities. All of this by following our 3 main values: safety, legality and efficiency.
In the last quarter of 2017 we were recognized for our efforts by being invited to participate in a tender process by then Belgocontrol (now skeyes) to deliver a UTM solution. We found it logical that other providers would be able to connect to the solution that would be offered, we assumed that indeed the solution would never be imposed as the sole solution.
We were not selected despite being our expertise and low cost.
We did not take this to court, we felt that that would halt the drone industry's progress , which was opposite of our values; we instead decided to focus on making our product even better. Anyway, the authorities stated they would never make the chosen solution mandatory, so we could always cooperate.
However, it now appears that the chosen solution is being made mandatory. We feel we were put to sleep and made to believe we were allowed; we did the notifications (still do actually) in the 21 months it took for the solution to come live.
We think that it is necessary to go back to the present day.
When the BCAA communicated on September 3rd 2019 that the chosen product would become mandatory on 12th of September, and seeing skeyes (formerly Belgocontrol)âs spokespeople declare 'world premieres', the time to stand by the sidelines was over.
We immediately engaged into constructive communication with the BCAA. We not only pointed out that we believe that it was in no position to impose the use of the product , but we also asked for the freedom to be able to continue our services to the same public we had been doing for the last nearly 4 years.
We got a transition period of 3 months. This transition period ends on 12th of December 2019. At that day the chosen solution will be made mandatory. No other means of compliance with the drone regulations are made possible. Not via our platform. Not via any other platform.
In the last 2,5 months we engaged multiple times with the BCAA, and once with skeyes, to find a solution. We get a lot of support from our user base and people who do not want to be told what to do, even when it's free, and especially on a flawed product.
All of our efforts were to no avail. At the end of October, the BCAA has let us know that it will not change its decision and does not want to listen to any of our arguments.
The solution is easy and straightforward however. The BCAA could simply extend the transition period until the new EASA regulations comes into force. In theory this is around July 2020, or 8 months from now. At that moment derogations and notifications as we know it will come to end and the chosen solution becomes obsolete. In fact it took 21 months to make and will be used for 8 months, which cannot be understood.
The BCAA (but much more skeyes) does not want to extend the transition phase. For the sake of safety, they say.
Which safety ? The safety we have helped to uphold for the last 4 years, the last 21 months of which the industry was waiting for the chosen solution ? That safety ? The same safety that has been front and center in our application since day 1 ? The one that we help to control by a realtime risk assessment which goes above and beyond any drone regulation and which every pilot using our platform gets for free (IDROGRADE) ? That safety ?
What is the reason why we absolutely need to get banned from the Belgian drone scene?
What is the reason to force this tool upon the Belgian drone pilots 8 months before new rules will become law?
We felt we had to do something, and hence on November 2nd filed a court case against the BCAA for annulment of the decision to make Droneguide Pro mandatory as of December 12th. We remain of course a strong supporter of a constructive solution. We still hope common sense will prevail. One that protects our rights but also the rights of our users and the drone sector as a whole. We rather spend our time and money on productive aspects, those who help the industry forward.
This is not only a fight for our rights. We also fight for the drone pilot's rights. And the rights of the multiple useful drone applications and ventures that would be made impossible by a decision to make aforementioned solution mandatory. If you read this and you think your rights are being jeopardized, of you are feeling you are not getting the service you need from the BCAA or from the solution you are forced to use, or if you just support us in our struggle, don't hesitate to share it with us.
The case for openness and connectivity.
As an epilogue to this post, we also like to share with you our view and opinion on how the drone sector can be helped by offering openness and being connected. Both of which we feel very passionate about.
In an ever evolving world software creators have realised that applications have to work together to get user or customer needs solved and expectations fulfilled as good as possible. It is impossible to offer everything a user needs in one solution. Convenience becomes a commodity. Automation an evidence. The convenience and ease that automation brings is being made possible by smart connections. Connections are made possible by communication protocols.
We as humans use natural language to communicate. That's even possible for software systems these days, but in the last decades people behind software platforms have used APIs (Application programming interfaces) to allow systems to communicate with one another. Nowadays all systems have some sort of API to allow to integrate data and features from one application to another. Droneguide Pro has not.
The whole thing with connectivity and openness is even more important when we are talking about flying (ro)bots. Even though legislators don't allow them to fly autonomously everywhere (yet), it's a public secret that they will do so eventually. Where people would have frowned upon the concept of self-driving cars and the likes, autonomous vacuum cleaners and ever-more connected homes have proven that in the next decade things will shift. And things will shift faster than supporting solutions can follow.
Where (drone) pilots and car drivers are still a necessity today, the next generation will laugh with the very idea. Just like we wouldn't understand a world without internet, smartphones, airplanes or even electricity, pilotless airplanes and selfdriving cars will be just as common. My grandmother couldn't even imagine the very same tablet she's working with today.
Technology is not moving forward with small steps every decade like how it has been. It is now making big leaps every month.
When people or companies want to build innovative applications with drones they will want to make sure that everything can be handled with ease and in an automated fashion. Just like how things are evolving in our everyday lives.
To be able to handle regulatory aspects in those applications side-by-side with the technical, economical, societal,... challenge it may solve. The legal systems and the tools we (have to) use to be compliant have to be adapted to the 21th century.
When authorities choose systems that only look at making their lifes easier, instead of trying to help society and the industry move forward, we go from bad to worse. They create harm upon whole industries to help a few players create monopolies where none are needed.
How can an authority choose for, and try to impose a system that does not want to talk with any other system? They should know they are creating harm to anyone that wants to make a business in the field they are trying to close down.
When looking at drone flight approvals, they close down the possibility to get automated legal clearance to fly in a certain area but favour a system that can only be managed by humans. It's applying 1990 bureaucracy methods by means of modern technology.
A system that cannot talk with other systems, whether it's software that happens before or during flights, takes away the possibility for applications that want to integrate regulation in a bigger flow. To unlock yet unknown potential. Anno 2019 on the brink of 2020 we don't need to explain the variety of applications that could benefit from automated exemption or flight notification handling.
Meanwhile, worldwide there are various examples of already deployed systems that do allow the industry to thrive. The most well-known system is obviously LAANC. It allows for operators in the United States to request exemptions for (small) restricted areas for short amounts of time. It's way more advanced than the email/digital paper flows that the closed systems such as Droneguide offers. And it allows vendors of any software to connect to this system to offer the drone operators choice in how they want to get permission to fly. Choice in how they want to notify their flights. It allows these people to be compliant without the hassle of being compliant. It allows these companies to thrive. Being deprived of choice - soon the case for companies in Belgium - will cause companies to only suffer and risk to have to put down the books because of unnecessary regulatory burden and insecurity.
When people ask why starting drone companies fail or run away from Belgium. Situations like this could obviously be the reason.
We are in a time where all citizens expect supervisory authorities to be leaner, where CEOs of the big national monopolies complain that their companies will never be as effective as private companies in dealing with the things they have to deal with. During that time we freely give up the possibility to create an open, lean system that makes our industry thrive.
The Droneguide system is a closed system where all drone users are forced to login to request exemptions and send notifications. For drone pilots there is no other reason to use this tool than to perform these actions, which are required by law.
These services could as well be performed through other applications. For example an application that's integrated with the flight controller of the drone. Applications who are tailored to perform certain inspections, like windmills or solar panels. Or it could be integrated in a full suite of applications to handle all things a drone operator needs, like IDRONECT. And in the future it could automatically be performed from the drone itself without a need from direct user interaction.
By forcing everybody to use one system directly through its interface all the businesses that try to make innovative applications are caused harm. The industry is caused harm as they are losing the opportunity of choice for a specific product. As time goes by newer and more innovative ways of handling certain aspects of a drone business will become apparent, but a monopoly holder will be handling everything and being a monopoly holder will not be able to provide the required flexibility.
In contrast, during the last 24 months, the period within which the nearly obsolete application serving the monopoly in Belgium was created, the FAA has developed a UAS data exchange program. They do not try to monopolise any services other than the things they really need to control. Sending notification or requesting exemptions can be done by third party services and is far more automated than the Skeyes interface. They provide the industry ways to interact with them, and build as few things as possible to prevent hampering the market. They remove any barrier that is not really required.
Note: Removing barriers was recently added to the list of actions to promote the drone industry in the Belgian Civil Drone Council. They can start by removing one by allowing a longer transition period.Â
Above is a diagram of the FAA LAANC system (part of the UAS data exchange program). You can clearly see that the market is less interrupted and does not need to change from the tools they already use. All the players on the market are able to implement LAANC directly in their applications as soon as they get a LAANC approval from the FAA.
Here is also a list from the FAA website that shows many players implemented this technology in their application. This proves that such an open system is not a request made by the faint. It's rather how the system should have been in the first place. The fact that BCAA as ruling authority and skeyes are insisting that there needs to be a closed system in Belgium only proves they are not acting in the interest of the industry. Ironically enough, one of the approved service suppliers for LAANC is the company that provides skeyes with this extremely closed system. As this company, hence skeyes and hence BCAA are aware that such a system exists, could be implemented and could be beneficial for the market, why do they insist to close down the market?
Right, time to crank it up a notch. Growing, accelerating and expanding our platform is a very exciting step for us to take. This blog article gives a bit of background info on how we got here, where we are going and what you may see from us in the future.
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Right, time to crank it up a notch.
Growing, accelerating and expanding our platform is a very exciting step for us to take. This blog article gives a bit of background info on how we got here, where we are going and what you may see from us in the future.
For the past 4,5 years we â thatâs mainly Chris,my co-founder and CTO and myself â have been working and developing IDRONECT before, during and after our other activities. Itâs been a long process, with some ups and downs but in the end with a tangible and stable result. The result is that we have built a software platform that allows drone pilots to fly safe, legal and efficient and at the same time connects the different players of the drone ecosystem: pilots to customers, pilots to schools, pilots to authorities, manufacturers to schools, insurances to pilots, ⊠you get the picture:
All these features are made to fulfil our promise to the drone pilot: to Fly More in a safe, legal and efficient way.
The efforts of the last years have made that we are now one of the most complete UAV Management Systems (UMS). In the world. In a next blog post I will be highlighting the difference between so-called UTMâs and UMSâs. Well, letâs give you a quick spoiler alert on that one: a UTM is a special form of UMS. A UMS does more. Traffic management is just one side of the story that a UMS tells. We are a very complete UMS.
In the last year we wanted to see if the value we brought to our home market (Belgium) would also work in other countries. We were happy to welcome drone pilots and enthusiasts from 46 countries on our platform since the go-live of version 4.0. The understanding that people all around the world who believe in drones and the good that drones can bring are finding what they need in IDRONECT gave us the energy to shift the entire project in a higher gear.
We are happy to announce that we have found the necessary investment to be able to do just that. Up until now we were bootstrapping and we were focused on making the product better. We believe that it was the right path to follow: to use our own funds and revenue to build and finetune the product and then to boost the acceleration with new means. It allowed us to grow alongside a drone ecosystem which also became more mature.
In our revived blog and other content we will give updates on how we are doing.
Growing is a step that requires sacrifice as well.
I have decided to stop my flying career so I can fully dedicate myself to IDRONECT. Flying an airplane was a childhood dream and I was happy to have been able to make my passion my job for the last 18 years. I flew real cool airplanes (Learjets and Falcons) and was able to see a lot of the world. I am most fond of my flying for an air ambulance operator in the beginning of my flying career. Flying a Learjet35 from Colombo to Melbourne remains the highlight.
But my passion for aviation grew past the mere flying. I wanted to do more. First by starting a consultancy firm, then by creating a software solution for safety management. The planets aligned when I met Chris, and we started Aviatize LLC. With this company we wanted to build smart software solutions for the aviation industry. We still want. We still do. It is just that IDRONECT has become our focal point over the last 4 years.
Itâs time to say goodbye to the cockpit and focus 200% on the building of our products. As one door closes, a new gate opens.
Last week we moved into our new office. We are still settling in but it has all of the trimmings to make it our new home for the next years and growing our team.
Our team in Belgium has doubled in size as well. I will be writing a post on our new team-members in the next weeks.
In the meantime, we welcome you at our new headquarters in Belgium. Give us a shout and come by for a talk and a cup of coffee.
For now, time to push the throttle forward go ballistic with IDRONECT. Join us for the ride !
We were talking in our office in Ghent about drones, weâre a drone start-up, so no big surprises there. We came to the conclusion that everyone on the team has a favourite drone and thatâs what this blogpost is about.
We were talking in our office in Ghent about drones, weâre a drone startup, so no big surprises there.
We came to the conclusion that everyone on the team has a favourite drone and that's what this blogpost is about. The following list is in no way the absolute best drone proven by lots of data,⊠Theyâre just our favourite drones in terms of awesomeness, features and so on.
A good drone pilot needs good equipment, thereâs no doubt in that. Without a high quality drone it gets very hard to create high quality solutions. Thatâs why we created this list, our pick of the top 5 professional drones. Maybe weâll write another blogpost about our favourite toy drones. Who knows.
+ Extremely stable The DJI Matrice 600 Pro is a perfect drone to get professional cinematic drone footage and for other industrial uses. Pre-installed arms and antennas make the setup easy, and the systemâs modular design gives you the possibility to mount additional modules.
The DJI Matrice 600 gives you the possibility to carry heave camcorders while flying stable at a decent height. Which is great for people who are looking for professional cinematic shots. Itâs made to be easy to fly and reliable in the sky.
+ High quality footage - No D-log in intelligent mode
+ Quiet
The DJI Mavic pro is a compromise between the Phantom and the smaller DJI drones. The DJI Mavic 2 Pro is very small and foldable which makes it a good drone for people who are on the go and unwilling to compromise on quality.
The Hasselblad-camera is a top notch Swedish camera. Hasselblad shot a lot of iconic footage over the years including the first moon landing. With a focus on color detail, the DJI Mavic 2 Pro will get you amazing areal shots with stunning color detail.
+ Top or bottom - Very expensive camera mounting - Heavy
+ Extremely stable
+ âEasyâ to transport
If you want the most stable drone for your professional drone footage whether itâs for cinematic or industrial purposes and money is not a problem. This is the way to go. The altitude hold of the Freefly Alta 8 is one of the best in the field, especially compared with DJI drones. The Freefly Alta 8's altitude hold has the option to be put in manual mode which gives you full control.
The Freefly Alta 8 folds up compact and the handle on the top of the drone makes it easy to carry the drone to your take-off spot. It takes about 15 minutes to switch from bottom mount to top mount and gives to same stable footage as flying with a bottom mounted camera. This is a great way to mix up your shots!
+ Smartphone app - No built-in display on the remote
+ DJI integrations
The DJI Phantom 4 Pro V2.0 is the 4th generation in the phantom line of DJI. Itâs one of DJIâs most popular drones. A lot of professional drone pilots go for the DJI Phantom 4 for itâs great price and all round ussage.
The 4k video recording possibility combined with the gimbal gives you high quality and stable footage. Compared to his younger siblings the Phantom 4 has a more robust design and a better camera. This makes it worth it to make the upgrade from your Phantom 3 to a Phantom 4.
The Autel Robotics Evo drone is a drone made to challenge the DJI Mavic. On paper the Autel Robotics Evo outperforms the DJI Mavic on every front. If youâre not specifically looking for a DJI drone, the Autel Robotics Evo is a solid option as a small semi-pro level drone.
The controller allows you to let the Autel Robotics Evo travel for 7 kilometers which is a lot further than most drones in this price range. The app for the drone comes with the pre-installed option to do 3D mapping which makes it perfect for people who are exploring this area of the drone world. The camera supports 4K video recording which makes it a great choice for areal photographers as well.
This top 5 is based purely on our personal opinions.
The list is not sponsored and we have no connection to any of these manufacturers.
Each month we have a deeper look at one aspect of the aviation environment that drones are operated in. This month we will give some more information on NOTAMâs. NOTAM stands for Notice To Airmen.
Each month we have a deeper look at one aspect of the aviation environment that drones are operated in. This month we will give some more information on NOTAMâs.
NOTAM stands for Notice To Airmen.
NOTAMâs are notices or short snippets that contain important information for the men and women who fly aircraft. So thatâs also essential for the men and women who fly unmanned aircraft or drones.
These notices inform pilots about closure of runways or airspaces, high obstacles like cranes in the vicinity of an airport, fire work displays, and so on. NOTAMs are specifically important to flight crews of airplanes and helicopters when it comes about airport operations for planning purposes (you donât want to show up at your destination airfield after a 9hr transatlantic flight and just a little bit of fuel remaining , only to find out that the airfield is closed due to a local strike âŠ)
For drone pilots, NOTAMS carry a lot of information that is particularly useful in knowing which airspace is out of limits for drone operations.
Think about military airspace that is activated for training helicopter missions, or danger areas that are activated and do not allow any traffic to fly in or through.
Also, sometimes NOTAMS are being issued to inform airplane or helicopter crews of drone operations. You will see these type of UAC NOTAMs either when they are in close proximity to airports or airfields or when they risk going a bit higher than normal and could interfere with low flying general aviation traffic. C5351/19 NOTAMN Q) EGTT/QWULW/IV/BO/AW/000/009/5115N00045W001
A) EGLF B) 1910130000 C) 1910252359
E) MULTIPLE DRONES OPERATING INSIDE THE FARNBOROUGH ATZ PSN _ 511522N 0004455W RADIUS 0.43NM, UP TO HGT600FT AGL / 853FT AMSL
F) SFC
G) 853FT AMSL
When looking at the NOTAM my eyes immediately scanned the snippet and focused on the free text stating âMultiple drones operating inside the âŠâ, â600FT AGLâ. But I realised I never really looked at the page filling abbreviations and codes in the rest of the snippet.
Even while we at IDRONECT provide drone pilots with visual NOTAM information on the flight chart I thought it might be a good idea to reveal the mystery behind the structure and elements of a NOTAM message.
We are all airmen arentât we ?
First of all NOTAM messages follow an international standard. This standard is described by Annex 15 of the ICAO Convention. . It deals with Aeronautical Information Services. NOTAM formats are described in detail in Appendix 6 to this document.
Hereâs a summary:
The NOTAM starts with a letter and an identification number. In this case C5351.
/19 is the applicable year.
It is a New NOTAM. NOTAMN, other possibilities are NOTAMR(replacing another NOTAM) and NOTAMC (cancelling another NOTAM)
Then there is a Qualifying Line starting with the letter Q, after which we get into more detail by describing the identifiers (letters A to G)
The Qualifying Line summarizes the scope of the NOTAM by listing the following items, all separated by a forward slash.
FIR : The applicable Flight Information Region. In this case EGTT (London Area)
NOTAM CODE :Â total of five letters and the first letter is always the letter Q. The second and third letters identify the subject, and the fourth and fifth letters denote the status. Choosing these letters is a whole new subject but if you want to really dig deep, go to Doc8400 . In this case QWULW.
TRAFFIC I = IFR, V = VFR, K = NOTAM is a checklist. In our example it is both for IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) and VFR (Visual Flight Rules).
PURPOSE N = NOTAM selected for the immediate attention of flight crew members, B = NOTAM of operational significance selected for PIB entry, O = NOTAM concerning flight operations ,M = Miscellaneous NOTAM; not subject for a briefing, but it is available on request,K = NOTAM is a checklist . In this example we have a operational significant NOTAM. Yep, flying into drones at 800feet AGL in the airport area is significant alright !.
SCOPE A = Aerodrome, E = En-route, W = Warning. Again the drones flying in the vicinity of the airfield would indeed justify an aerodrome warning.
and 7) LOWER/UPPER LOWER and UPPER limits shall only be expressed in flight levels (FL). Flight levels are abbreviated forms of a flight altitude above the standard altimeter setting of 1013hPa. So 39000 feet above this pressure level would be abbreviated to FL390. We cut the last two zeroâs. In this case 000 means ground level, and 009 means 900 feet.
COORDINATES, RADIUS The latitude and longitude accurate to one minute, as well as a three-digit distance figure giving the radius of influence in NM (e.g. 4700N01140E043). 5115N00045W001 = 51degrees 15minutes North, 000 degrees (Greenwhich !) 45 minutes West and a radius of 1 NM (thatâs the smallest we can go here).
Then we see the identifiers
A = aerodrome to which NOTAM is applicable. In our case EGLF = Farnborough
B = starting time described as year, month, day, hours and minutes in UTC. The start of the day is â0000â. In our example 1910130000 means 2019, October 13th at the start of the day.
C = ending time in the same format as described above. If the period is permanent then the term âPERMâ is used. If it is uncertain when the period will end âESTâis added to say that the timing is estimated. End of day is â2359â. In our example 1910252359 means 2019, October 25th at the end of the day.
E = NOTAM Code, complemented where necessary by ICAO abbreviations, indicators, identifiers, designators, call signs, frequencies, figures and plain language. If the NOTAM is only for local use, local language can be used.
I think we already have a good idea what the NOTAM is about, but maybe the abbreviations ATZ, AMSL and AGL are interesting. ATZ = An aerodrome traffic zone (ATZ) is defined as: An airspace of defined dimensions established around an aerodrome for the protection of aerodrome traffic.
AMSL = above mean sea level
AGL = above ground level
F) and G) lower and upper height limits of activities or restrictions, with an indicaton of the reference.
In our example we are looking at F) SFC (surface) and G) 853FT AMSL
Where to find NOTAMS in IDRONECT ?
Of course that would be quite complicated to read all NOTAMS like that no ? We know. So we made it easy to manage all of the relevant NOTAMâs for drone pilots.
NOTAMâs can be found in three different ways. All of our plans come with up to date worldwide NOTAMs. We update every hour so you wonât miss out on any important ones.
The first place to show you the NOTAMâs is on the flight chart. Thatâs the place where you would create a flight in the first place
In the left section you will see this icon
When you click on it, the NOTAMâs will be shown on the flight map.
If you then click on the NOTAM area you will get the details, like shown here for an activated area by NOTAM in Croatia
The second and third place to find NOTAM information is once you created a flight scenario.
To recap, you can make a flight scenario months before you actually fly the scenario, so it can very well be that there was no NOTAM active at the moment you created it. But now that you will fly it, it is important to check the NOTAMâs once more.
So in the dashboard, go to one of the created flight scenarios and click on view.
Once you are in the scenario view, you can either click on the tab AIRSPACE or on the tab NOTAM to see all relevant NOTAMs.
When in the AIRSPACE tab, you can see the planned flight zone of the scenario you created. The same NOTAM icon shows up on the right side. Click on it and see if there are any NOTAMs active for your planned flight.
When you chose the NOTAM tab, you get the NOTAMâs in written form. But now you are fully proficient to read them in that way so thatâs a piece of cake now.
Then you can filter the NOTAMâs to see all of them, only the ones that talk about zone activation, or only the ones that deal with events that are relevant below 500 feet.
Thatâs it for this blog article.
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