Utility Companies Embrace Drones For Efficiency, Safety
On a hill
overlooking Millerton Lake in Fresno County a group of workers are gathering
around a cell tower. They’re watching a tiny white drone slowly circle the
tower from the ground all the way to the top. Quasie Jones is with the drone
imaging company Skycatch.
So what it’s doing
is taking a picture every two seconds,” Jones says. “So by the end of it it’ll
basically have probably like five or 600 photos. So then our technology renders
that and creates a 3D model.”
After the model of
the tower is created the drone can then make decisions on its own on on whether
there’s anything wrong. It does this by comparing previous photos and video of
the tower with what’s recorded today. If there's anything off then it notifies
AT&T. It’s a dangerous job that can take hours if done by a person. Art Pregler with AT&T’s Drone Program says his team’s fed thousands of photos and video
into an algorithm to teach the drone what to look for.
“A technician will just get a
trouble-ticket saying there’s this type of defect at this location that they
need to go fix,” says Pregler. “However it was a drone that flew that and made
that determination and told that technician.”
Pregler says AT&T isn’t getting rid of
people for tasks like this, it’s just streamlining work on the company’s
nationwide system of around 65,000 networks and more than 100,000 projects. A
drone operator is still needed to run the drone and technicians are still
needed to fix anything the drone finds wrong with the cell tower. He says using
drones creates safer conditions for the 15,000 technicians AT&T employs
especially when they’re working on towers that range from 60 to 400 feet tall.
“We can fly the drone before the tower
climber ascends the tower so they know the condition of the tower, they know
the condition of the safety equipment on the tower,” says Pregler. “They know
what equipment and tools to bring with them when they make that climb.”
The company is also using drones to provide
internet service to rural areas. Pregler says they hope to use helicopter sized
drones tethered to the ground equipped with WIFI technology to bring high speed
internet to remote places in the U.S. He says technology like this should be
ready by 2020.
“If there’s an event throughout the day
that requires additional capacity the network can dispatch a drone there,
provide that extra coverage where it needs and then when the coverage needs
goes away the network will tell the drone to return or go to another location,”
says Pregler.
AT&T isn’t alone in using drones to
optimize their procedures. UC Merced’s drone lab at the old Castle
Air Force Base in Atwater is working on a number of projects using drones to do
jobs that are too time consuming for people. Dr. YangQuan Chencreated the
lab when he began teaching at UC Merced in 2012.
“We use drones as
a vehicle to attract more students into the STEM area,” says Chen. “It stands
for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. So we started from having
a summer academy for high school students.”
Chen also has
undergraduate and graduate students working on drone related projects. One of
them uses technology from NASA called a sniffer that analyzes dust for signs of
life on Mars. UC Merced uses smaller version that they attach to their drones
that fly over natural gas pipelines to find leaks. This is PHD Student Derek
Hollenbeck’s project.
“There’s a huge safety concern on leaks
that go undetected and then also concerns on surveillance,” says Hollenbeck.
“There was an incident in Bakersfield where a construction worker excavated on
a main line and it blew up. And it killed him and a few others.”
His project already gained traction with
companies like PG&E during tests in 2016 to detect methane leaks at the
company's test community in Livermore. The drone program also partnered with
Baltimore Gas and Electric in real life situations to detect leaks.
“To develop that confidence level to say
okay with the two passes and our algorithm we can save with 90 percent
accuracy it’s this house right here,” says Hollenbeck. “For them that's good
enough because they have to use their handheld instruments to pinpoint it.”
The miniature sniffer used by NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory is around a 1,000 times more sensitive than most
technology available. Hollenbeck says using this tech on drones could be a
major turning point in detection capabilities for gas companies. Imagine drones
flying around neighborhoods on their own instead of maintenance workers
manually looking for leaks. Hollenbeck says one of the main things holding back
his research are flight rules around drones.
“But I believe over the next few years when
we get things like the NASA UTM, which is unmanned aerial systems traffic
management, it might open these avenues where we can have flight rules for
drones doing these things like surveillance,” Hollenbeck says.
And this is just one use that UC Merced is
using drone technology to experiment with. They are also using drones in South
America to map caves and are developing drones that can land and take off on
water. This is all part of the university's goal of putting UC Merced on the
map when it comes to drone technology.
Ref: http://kvpr.org/post/utility-companies-embrace-drones-efficiency-safety
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