Ask Slashdot: Is a Home Drone Feasible?
dargaud writes "I live in an alpine setting and I'd like to be able to remotely view various remote valleys to check for ice formations for winter climbing. I wonder if there are cheap drones that could do that. Requirements would be: GPS guided on a preset route (no remote control necessary, and anyway there's no line of sight), at least 20km autonomy, 1 or 2 cameras on the sides to record valley walls, easy launching and autonomous landing (parachute?) at predefined point, ground detection to avoid crashes (if preset route is wrong or GPS echoes on valley walls as is often the case). Is there anything commercially available cheap enough, or any DIY that doesn't require a year of assembly?"
cheap?
Totally depends on your skill levels in meshing the brains together and fabrication. There is not enough information in your post to determine either, but based on the tone I am getting your best bet is money, and for the features you want with the durability just to survive the terrain while carrying a small load, it aint going to be cheap.
Off the top of my head maybe model aircraft with telepresence would be the best mix.
Dont see why it wouldn't be possible using Parallax Basic Stamp or another embedded controller that supports a serial GPS receiver. The platform itself may take a little fiddling as you would want something more stable then your standard RC helicopter. Something with coaxial counter rotating blade system or multiple sets of blades.
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
Pretty cool: http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2010/03/geekdads-2nd-3rd-anniversary-why-i-started-geekdad-by-chris-anderson/
Have you heard of this? http://www.sparkfun.com/products/8785
I would also supplement with:
Weight requirements for onboard camera equipment? Camera lenses for "valley walls" don't sound light.
http://code.google.com/p/arducopter/
http://store.jdrones.com/
http://diydrones.com/profiles/blogs/announcing-arducopter-the
http://store.jdrones.com/product_p/acq11arf.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IP5zdkckkKo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhZ5WZDtsM4
Go for it!
http://code.google.com/p/arducopter/wiki/ArduCopter
or for other options
http://diydrones.com
was thinking today that we should expect autonomous robots to try to replace union jobs first. Why do a truck roll when you can station a droid in every neighborhood?
Your not going to get anything pre-built ready to fly cheap (thousands of dollars), but if you build your own with arduino from a site like http://diydrones.com/, it becomes a lot more feasible (just choose an rc vehicle and follow the guide).
Rocket Surgeon.
But here is the FAA's take on it...
http://www.faa.gov/about/initiatives/uas/
It sounds like a straight-up cash purchase of a "turn-key drone" is your ticket. Otherwise, I'd recommend some kind of "DIY framework" - a drone platform that's taken care of the aerodynamics, controls and fuel tank and radio controls for you. Then you just tweak it to match your exact need.
My advice: whether, you DIY it or buy it outright.... don't skimp. Walk into this knowing you're probably going to spend twice as much as your initial estimate, if you can budget it. A semi-autonomous LONG RANGE drone is NOT cheap. A 20km bare minimum range puts this project into a semi-professional to professional level. Most "hobbiest" drone projects or commercial products couldn't even spit at the kind of quality and scale needed to perform such a task.
If you decide to buy something... look at commercial surveying drones. They have the range, the quality and the sophisticated integration already taken care of for you.
Do your homework upfront, buy it right the first time, take care of it and maintain it properly and it will give you YEARS of little or no issue service.
There's plenty of projects around that will do what you're after. An ArduPilot in a plane should do all that, although you'll likely have to land and take off under manual control. A hobby helicopter/quadcopter drone will have trouble with the range (20km is a fair way to travel, and i assume it's not a straight path). Sensors can deal with things like terrain avoidance and calculation of true altitude versus barometer altitude (to help prevent controlled flight into terrain).
But you need to clarify. Just how cheap is "cheap enough"? $500? $10000? Some values are required.
You can play at Comte Balthazar all you want, Ernst, but we all know that the real de Bleauchamps don't have earlobes. Keep trying...
diydrones.com
Sounds to me like he wants to photograph valley walls for safety purposes, so that he'll know in advance whether some faces will be safe to climb or not before putting anyone in danger.
This sounds like a perfectly valid use of his money, and I think you should get off your high horse.
(I speak as someone who both spends considerable money on my hobbies _and_ regularly donates to charities
http://www.avinc.com/uas/small_uas/raven/
10km range
only 50k
(this should tell you are way outta budget line)
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
http://www.faa.gov/about/initiatives/uas/uas_faq/index.cfm?print=go#Qn2
You can only fly them as if they were R/C aircraft, which means line-of-sight only and you must have a link to the ground. There are also ceilings and rules about keeping them away from buildings, people, and especially aircraft.
The quadrotors that you see people putting cameras on are not UAVs, they are just remote controlled and someone on the ground is flying them in real-time. The FAA is moving very slowly on approving any sort of UAV flights (public or civil) although they are being forced by Congress to finally issue rules about how they might go about approving civil UAVs. Otherwise, right now UAVs can only be flown by the government, government contractors, universities, or in military airspace.
There are no commercial options that a private citizen can buy, and the DIY options will require lots of work. This is an area of active research in the robotics community, and implementing any one of the features you mentioned would probably be sufficient to get you a Ph.D. right now.
The 20 km range excludes cheap electric model aircraft. Also your location requires something with a lot of excess power, due to the disturbed air over mountains.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Helicopter avionics is my trade. I also fly stunt rc heli's for fun.
Just of the top of my head, Your Alpine conditions are pretty much the most unfavorable to your expectations of cheap/simple/all in 1
- I expect the winds could knock you out. Only powerful collective pitch heli can handle winds, ie not quadrotors (fixed pitch)
- Heli's do not like high altitudes
- Li ion batteries do not like cold
- If you crash, im guessing its gone for good in the snow. im not aware of any consumer drones have tracking yet.
- Most consumer drones have 1 camera and low to mid level avionics/autopilot. I expect a fair bit of tweaking would be needed to reach your spec
Even still Good Luck !
-k
This collection of UAV links may be helpful: http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=358497
and also this forum in general: http://www.rcgroups.com/uav-unmanned-aerial-vehicles-238/
Hippies, they all want to change the world, but, all they do is smoke pot and smell bad. GFY, who are you to tell someone what to do with their time and resources? Nobody that's who. You know what would make me feel better? Less self-righteous douchebags like yourself pontificating on the Interwebs.
An interesting part of the DIY Drones stuff.
http://diydrones.com/profiles/blog/show?id=705844%3ABlogPost%3A44817
Winds might be sort of a problem.
I wonder how easy it would be to make a DIY drone using a powered paraglider.
Well, it does look like it has been asked:
http://diydrones.com/forum/topics/uav-paraglider?xg_source=activity
Cool.
So tramping all over the country side in the hope of finding something is much better than flying a small (electric?) plane to check it out before hand is better for the environment being tramped on? I suppose I have never known of a smart hippy before... I still have hope though.
This post belonged on 2012-04-01.
There's nothing on Earth that can do what you want.
Your requirements are self-defeating.
I'm a helicopter pilot.
I own 10 R/C helis.
I've flown UAVs.
I only own two R/C fixed-wing aircraft.
One has one camera on it.
Weight is everything. You want a 20Km range and
2 high-def cameras. Those things fly at 160Km/H max.
You're talking 15 minutes "there" and back. Not going to happen today.
*puff the magic dragon*
E
see http://diydrones.com/profiles/blog/show?id=705844%3ABlogPost%3A28583
Q) What are those restrictions for non-commercial UAVs flying without a COA?
A: You MUST do the following: 1) Stay below 400ft. 2) Maintain a "pilot in control", which is to say that you must always be able to take manual control and fly the aircraft out of danger (in general, that means maintaining line-of-sight contact with the aircraft). 3) Stay away from built-up areas. More detail is here.
Just program your household robot to control your flying car.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
I'm in the middle of writing my EE thesis is on embedded control systems for UAVs and this is as good a distraction as any, so here goes:
The kind of specs you're talking about you'd be lucky to get for high-end military and commercial (mini) drones. You'll either be spending tens(hundreds?) of thousands on an off the shelf model or a lot of time developing, testing, crashing and fixing your DIY solution. There are hundreds of DIY drones on the net but I doubt any of them have the kind of reliable autonomy you're talking about.
Autonomy is especially difficult, you'll need to learn a lot of control theory, kinematics, Navigation/AI and possibly computer vision. Then rememeber that you need to fuse sensor data from gyroscopes, acceleromters, GPS, compass, altitude and airspeed sensors, and that all of these sensors are unreliable/error prone. You need to be able to deal with loss of GPS link which means you need to have an alternate means of localisation(which is very difficult). Also, every commercial system I've seen requires an always on downlink and manned base-station for control, even if this isn't technically necessary, it's pretty much mandatory for safety.
Making an autonomous UAV only makes sense as a learning exercise or for R&D but it's not a good way to get any work done. If your goal is to get aerial photos, stick a camera on an RC plane, get some video goggles, a long range radio and some flying lessons.
I recommend you FPV and I find it more fun than the drone. There are many ready to fly solutions for cheap. Here is the link to the proper forums RcGroups http://youtu.be/b7e2IQ_Ft3c
It is a cool idea but the FAA wouldn't let you have one. At least one that didn't have a kill switch and stayed within visual range. Even if you were allowed you wouldn't be allowed to fly over anyone's home. While your intended goal is a remote area, I doubt they would let you. The prospect of a drone that could go on an autonomous scouting mission like that presents some problems from a general aviation perspective. As a student pilot we are trained and educated to make the skies safer. I fear that something like this would not only make the skies unsafe but it would not be legal, at least in the US. To get a good shot of the canyon walls you will probably want to fly in the same airspace as general aviation aircraft. In the remote areas as a VFR pilot you can fly as low as 500 ft. It is already hard to spot full sized aircraft in the same airspace, let alone one the size of a model aircraft. There is a quite complex set of rules/regulations for flying safely. These are found in the FAR/AIM handbook. They tell you who has the right of way in the air. If your UAV encounters a balloon, would it know which way to go. That assumes that it could reliably detect a balloon in mid-flight. How about a glider? Who is at fault if your UAV strikes another aircraft. What happens if your UAV crashes into a house? What happens if it flies in a cloud/fog? How will it communicate with other aircraft? These are the reasons that we are now only seeing the FAA grant limited drone usage to specialised agencies.
If you want to do recon go to a general aviation airport and ask some of the pilots there to take you up in their aircraft. Pilots are always looking for reasons to go fly. The cost of a flight could be as low as $100 for a couple of hours. If the pilot is a non commercial rated they are legally required to pay at least half of the costs. It is a benefit for them as they get to log the hours. It is a win/win for you both. Lastly, I'll say that most pilots won't want to. It is a risky proposition and you would want to find a pilot with a lot of hours.
For around $1500, you could have a radio controlled aircraft with one or more video links that can fly reliably over that kind of range. The price goes down to under $1000 if you can deal with shorter range. Basic autopilot functions (wing leveling and heading-hold) can be integrated for not much additional cost. All of this has been done before by many RC aircraft hobbyists, and flying by video is easier than flying by line of sight. However, you still have to fly the aircraft and it is not autonomous. Aircraft autonomy of the type you are requesting is very challenging and not available off-the-shelf. The cost and complexity required to achieve it will probably not be worthwhile for your application.
I am a geek attorney, but not your geek attorney unless you've already retained me. This is not legal advice.
Use a weather balloon, make a rig for it with some fans controlled by servos. (Either that or get a ready made R/C zeppelin) If you're using the weather balloon setup, you obviously want to do some experiments with how much helium you put in so it is mostly neutrally buoyant. Get an Arduino and you can get the GPS and camera parts that are ready made for it. Hook up your Arduino to the servos and battery as well obviously. Bonus points if you can rig a solar panel to the top to charge it up a little in flight.
I think it could be done for under $500 and some time building/programming.
But then again I've never touched any of this stuff. :D
I am in Northern Italy and sell just those. http://www.robots-everywhere.com Message me.
But is this really a better investment that something that betters our society like charity, support for out of work family, or something else that isn't seemingly wasteful?
Pretty much like your post, you could be using this time to do charity work, but you're not, so you're just a hypocrit. Standard hippie POV, want to change the world, but want someone to do it for them, just whinge and moan about how everyone else is the problem.
Why is everyone throwing a hissy fit? GP suggested looking into other options, he never said what dargaud should do with his money - in fact, more than once GP said he was free to do as he will.
I'm surprised that no one mentioned this project yet: http://www.openpilot.org/ It seems to be a mature project with a strong community. I learned about it listening to my favorite podcast ~ a year ago: FLOSS Weekly, Episode 148 ;-)
DISCLAIMER: IANAL, so this is not legal advice.
Having said that, I am rather interested in DIY drones, and therefore, I have been following technical and legal aspects of amateur drones/UAVs/UAS' for a couple of years. I don't see any *technical* reason why what you want to do isn't possible. However, if you live in the USA, I don't believe what you want to do is legal. As I understand, the FAA requires amateur operated drones to be under line-of-site control at all times. Here are some links to help you figure out the legal restrictions for what you want to do:
DIY Drones Regulatory FAQ
FAA Advisory Circular 91-57
Electronic Code of Federal Regulations
HTH!
MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
The price for the drone might be 20k but if you can resell the data or otherwise monetize the device then the cost can possibly be negative.
This post belonged on 2012-04-01.
There's nothing on Earth that can do what you want.
Your requirements are self-defeating.
I'm a helicopter pilot.
I own 10 R/C helis.
I've flown UAVs.
I only own two R/C fixed-wing aircraft.
One has one camera on it.
Weight is everything. You want a 20Km range and
2 high-def cameras. Those things fly at 160Km/H max.
You're talking 15 minutes "there" and back. Not going to happen today.
*puff the magic dragon*
E
http://vimeo.com/16080459
I'll just leave this here
The lack of line of sight is the killer. From one of many articles on the subject: FAA regulations developed in the 1970s to cover the amateur use of radio-controlled planes, which also apply to today's DIY drones. Those rules include restricting their altitude to 400 feet (120 meter), requiring them to always be in view of their controller on the ground and prohibiting them from being flown over built-up areas.
You could ask for a specific waiver. That is how researchers have been able to fly their drones. I am skeptical though that the FAA would be willing to issue a waiver for something is just a hobby.
This article was posted somewhere back in Feb 2012. I can't remember where, unfortunately. But some folks had posted the components used to make this.
http://news.mongabay.com/2012/0223-conservation_drone.html
Anyone know more details of this?
That reply was like a horse femur for that troll. He won't need to eat for a week!
This sounds similar to senior design projects that were being done when I was studying EE. Contact the nearest university with mechanical and electrical engineering programs and find out what's required to sponsor a senior design team.
DIY: Try this website: http://diydrones.com/
google Arducopter (opensource), Gaui (closed source), Dji innovation (closed source), KKmulticopter (half open source lawl) and there are many more but these are the main ones. And for the best video examples of what is possible today under 1500$ and how real it is, and beautifull landscapes like snow mountains, google "team blacksheep" or "Trappy fpv" .. enjoy
Nikon Rumors has a guest post with some pretty good setup
http://nikonrumors.com/2012/04/03/guest-post-aerial-drone-photography-when-your-camera-flies-without-you.aspx/
My read is he wants to scout for good climbing locations before trekking there. Safety is almost certainly better-assessed on-location.
I'm not an ice climber, but I have some knowledge of the sport and have done a bit of outdoor rock climbing.
http://ardrone.parrot.com/parrot-ar-drone/usa/
Yes leave it there. No two cameras. No self-maneuvering. No GPS. No valley winds. The problem with the specs is you can meet one or more of them... but to meet ALL OF THEM at a low cost? Never.
E
http://vimeo.com/31632654
It has to have a small missile for avalanche control at least, if not alien invasion counter insurgency!
Actually, that is Trappy's world record run, so:
It had 2 cameras (A GoPro and a low res security cam).
It has a GPS, return to home (self maneuvering), and a transmitter to send a live video signal back to someone on the ground
He flys in a valley between two mountains. And can handle moderate wind.
Total cost is less than $2000 on the plane, maybe $3000 counting ground equip.
Of course, that is a world record... not an easy thing to duplicate. But the main difficulty is in the "live video signal back to the ground". If you remove that requirement, things get a lot easier. And scarier, since you won't have feedback on what your flying mass of money is currently doing.
What it does not have, and what you will not find on ANY light plane right now is ground avoidance. Most of the rest is easy, even the preset route. (My $800 glider can do that). Even 20km total ground covered isn't too absurd... although 20km out and back with meandering is getting into "you'll have to work REALLY hard" territory.
Hmm, also, auto-landing is something that is not fully matured. Some systems have it, but usually mean for it to be a failsafe.
Finally, and this is really the only nail in his coffin, is that it sounds like he wants to do this with minimal work (Easy launch, easy landing, no control, etc makes me suspect this). And right now, while this can all be done, it requires a LOT of work and manual interaction with the plane.
This might not be a bookmark.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Start with a regular light plane and a smartphone. Connect the audio from the phone to servo-engines that are sound activated. Use a standard Wifi, bridge it with batteries when possible. And a whole lot of coding. Open source the project with a team. etc.
You may also want to check project Paparazzi home page. They make a great autopilot that has been used on a wide range of UAVs from small cheap ones to more expensive research projects. http://paparazzi.enac.fr/wiki/Main_Page
I'm not sure, but wouldn't it be feasible to install some cameras on top of the mountains that look to the valleys you want to observe? Is there any GSM coverage there? Then you have an internet connection to them. If this could suit your needs, it seems a lot cheaper.
Looks like ground avoidance would be the harder to match, so let's drop it and just have it fly higher. Then the autonomy, OK, let's do something closer. As for the remote control, I was thinking of leaving that out entirely for several reasons: lack of line of sight, no need to learn to fly, no need for $$$ ground equipment, saves weight on the plane (no antenna, less power). But it means that it must land by itself; or at least crash with minimal damage! High video quality is not a requirement, two decent webcams would do (or maybe one split with a mirror). As for the legality of it all...
As for the minimal work, well, yes... C;-) I'm a software guy who deals with hardware daily at work. But I want to _use_ it, not spend months putting it together !
Non-Linux Penguins ?
Better off to get an ultra light and a hard core adrenaline junkie to fly it. As far as I know, autonomous drones are not sophisticated enough to deal with the crazy wind patterns you get in alpine areas.
Since you want images of possible ice climbing routes, you need to either get some serious glass on the cameras or get very close to get good images of the surface. Just what kind of resolution do climbers need? I'd imagine they'd want good enough resolution to tell if that 5 cm wide feature is actually a crack or just a raised edge casting a shadow. Not something you could easily do with the web cam level cameras many UAV/RPV have.
Serious glass brings you into the realm of the big drones, the size of ultra light aircraft, but at higher cost. And none of the dinky ones have a high enough airspeed to over come the random gusts. If your drones max speed is say 35 KPH and suddenly you get a 40 KPH tail wind (easily achieved in alpine regions) your drone becomes a rock.
Skilled pilots can cope a bit better in these conditions, slower reaction times sure, but they have the wit to look miles ahead, aside or behind and see the wind patterns betrayed in the grass, clouds and flight of birds.
As an alternate approach, have you considered looking into powering some network capable PTZ (pan tilt zoom) cameras with a solar panel and mounting them on places where you have line of sight to them and they in turn have line of sight to one or more faces you are interested in surveying? There's a lot of hacker info on extending the range of wireless network devices to insane ranges and on building good solid outdoor enclosures. Mount the camera a few thousand feet up a cliff and you can be sure that not many teen vandals would get their hands on it. Mounting just below an overhang would also protect it from rock and ice falls.
For that matter, if you belong to a local climbing club, the others could chip in on more cameras for more faces, each linking back to some members home. There is also plenty of info out there on how to cobble together the various cam feeds into a simple web page so that any member can access any camera and look for themselves.
close to what you are after...
http://www.sensefly.com/products/swinglet-cam
priced about 7000 euros
me thinks you may need a swarm of individual drones doing each its own duty perfect and reports to a single entity.
While you could dive in at the deep end and purchase a drone, they’re more expensive than a house. Some are more expensive than a full road of houses! (my new currency is houses, does anyone have change for one?)
Back to the point. Sounds like you have a cool hobby. Freely climbing in a range of local mountains and valleys! Awesome!
If this project is to be a hobby rather than just a tool, then perhaps starting small and working up would be a good way to progress.
For filming in caves I’ve purchased a small helicopter with a camera. It was not expensive and can’t deal with wind at all. Fine for caves though. Image quality is at the fun end of the spectrum rather than good
Rather like a drone, I’m not flying it while viewing the footage. I have to download it after. It has completely changed my direction from wanting a drone to wanting immediate feedback of the footage. Perhaps later, if I get really enthusiastic (kids are on the way so this won’t happen) drone like modes would be good. There’s no way to control anything once it’s gone round a couple of corners in a cave as the rock eats radio waves you see.
In conclusion I present 2 directions for you. Firstly a hobby, progressing and building up to whatever it is that you really want, testing the water along the way. Or secondly, to become an evil mastermind, live inside one of your local mountains with lots of minions to do you bidding and use a giant parabolic space mirror to see around your local area.
As a general aviation pilot, who has had occasion to do mountain flying, please for the love of dog don't do it unless it has "sense and avoid" mechanisms you're positive work well. You can't rely on GA aircraft having transponders, either, in remote areas often they don't. It's all about see-and-avoid. So your drone needs to see-and-avoid too.
I've almost had a mid-air collision with an RC aircraft flying where it shouldn't have been. Small RC size aircraft are hard to see from a full size aircraft, even a slow one like mine (115 mph on a good day). In the case of the RC aircraft, I think the aircraft was deliberately flown at us (we were a formation of 2 aircraft, so perfectly visible - it actually flew between us going the opposite direction).
If you want to check out stuff from the air, then learn to fly and do it as pilot in command of an actual aircraft. Yes, it's expensive, but a PPL will probably cost the same to do as building a drone with the capabilities you need, and it opens up a whole lot of other fun, too.
I also fly RC helicopters and fixed wing, so it's not like I'm some grumpy GA pilot who hates RC.
Oolite: Elite-like game. For Mac, Linux and Windows
I own a few acres of wooded land and if i could buy a mini helicopter with a downward & forward facing camera (45 degrees) to keep an eye on my land from inside my home at my computer would be great! i would be willing to pay a few hundred for a system like that
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
If you want pictures of valleys, how about sticking a few webcams on trees? The power and data problems might be more managable than drone-building. The cost should be less too.
But in a forest setting. Last I heard, he'd already set up a stream, but if I recall correctly it was only for a few days so he could see how the system worked. Nothing too high-tech, just a gps and internet attatched to a toy robot with a camera in it, but for that cheap it's good enough I suppose. I think for doing something up in the Alps you'd need something a little hardier and better at climbing things, but it certainly is a start. I am all for attatching a spycam and GPS to the FreeSki monster, though. Just plant it on some poor sap and check his location every five minutes to see where it takes the body.
all the technical stuff can be worked out, just takes time and resouces. your biggest issue will be the people the goven the airspace you wish to fly. as far as i know even law enforcment and the military have difficulty in getting permission to fly in area where the public maybe.
Can u help me build a drone? Requirement: 6h autonomous flight, follows a GPS route and can carry two small payloads.
I am asking from my ignorance, but wouldn't a set of stationary webcams do the trick?
Install some weather-proof pan-and-tilt webcams with some sort of wireless connectivity (GPRS, 3G...) and you might even use solar panels for power.
Sounds difficult so maybe a different solution might work - say a tethered weather balloon to get high enough and some reasonably high spec cameras. Could probably at least get a good idea of conditions, even if there are a few line of sight type issues. Quick google indicates you can get ~ 1kg payload for $100 or so.
Sounds to me like he wants to photograph valley walls for safety purposes, so that he'll know in advance whether some faces will be safe to climb or not before putting anyone in danger.
This sounds like a perfectly valid use of his money, and I think you should get off your high horse.
He wants a flash tech toy to make his hobby more interesting and cooler. It is no better or worse than building a tubocharged race car to race around a track as fast as possible. Neither of them are exactly necessary for the good of society, any more than stamp collecting or playing WoW are.
If he wanted to do something socially useful, he could always share his time, money and technical expertise with the local mountain rescue team or something.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Pretty much like your post, you could be using this time to do charity work, but you're not, so you're just a hypocrit
Yes, because if you don't spend 100% of your own time doing something, you have no right to expect others to do it at all. So when Gandhi spent five minutes taking a shit instead of engaging in non-violent protest, he was no better than his colonial masters, and was obviously a hypocrite too.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
sounds like a fun project!
I'd advise you to hang around with some pilots/take some flying lessons/study the Basic Aeronautical Knowledge coursework. Mountain flying is a lot of fun but fraught with peril. Being remotely linked to the drone, it will be much harder to control and VERY challenging for it to be autonomous. Turbulence, mountain waves, wind shear... The wind behaves ~VERY~ differently when mountains are involved. I'm certified for low-level flying in a fixed-wing including mountainous terrain (in Western Australia... not that we have real mountains...) and can't stress the flying skills that you will need.
This is assuming you're already up to speed on how day-to-day weather would impact your drone's safety and performance.
There's a lot of posts on the technical issues of telemetry and autonomy, I won't go into that.
This sounds like an AWESOME project and I'm envious that you have the time investigate it and possibly start work on it. I wish you all the best.
But seriously, talk to someone at the local flying club/search&rescue/police pilot/military pilot.
Ideally, find someone who's flown through the area in a fixed-wing in weather that is similar to when you would want to use this drone.
Maybe leave out that you're planning on building a drone until you get the idea that they would be interested. You're simply a dude who wants to learn to fly around the mountains where you live. At least you'll get an honest answer of how hard it will be to keep it from cruising into a mountain side IF you were inside of it.
I really hope to read about this on HackADay.com in a few months time.
in the mean time, maybe some solar-charged cameras + transmitters with a good view of the areas would be easier?
S
Pilot, E.Eng
Look at me and mine for a proof
I know a bit about some of the RC rules in The Netherlands, and altitude is a limiting factor in the legality, so expect to be forced to stay "low". You wouldnt want to found guilty of smashing your RC drone in a GA plane, it would also hurt the RC community a lot more then help it. Please keep that in mind.
Landing by itself is going to require a parachute and a method of firing it.
Anyway, think about the danger your plan posses for the other air traffic. Everyone shares the air together so please think about your fellow aviators(Commercial, GA, sports etc).
And you think it is impossible to do?
There are few posts here what links to circuitboards with open source software for automatic flight control.
Just look those videos http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G__WvTWeAGw and think how much you can do with a cheap RC planes (I call it cheap when it is not over 10 000 euros).
A normal glider with wingspan about a meter can do a over 115km flight alone. Of course it is totally random flight but capable flight very long distances. Then add such plane a two servos, GPS and battery and expand the wing span littlebit to carry extra weight and you have it.
BUT, if you want a true autopilot system, what meas it should have lasers range finders or at least a optical detection system like fighter jets have, you are not talking about small hand held devices anymore but full blown UAV's.
But with GPS and heightmap it could be possible to do a somekind, with safety height of 100-200 meters.
Depending on which "Alpine area" you are talking about probably determines the feasibility of the project.
I suspect you won't have any luck if you are trying this near Chamonix as it is too densely populated and has a fair quantity of air traffic, but may be ok in Japan/US or the greater ranges but I've not been so can't comment. That said if you are in the European Alps then conditions reports are already available for popular lines and a bit of extrapolation from that will give you a bit of info on less popular areas.
Are you surveying for new routes or just checking if a line is 'in'?
Finding ice features is one thing (Google Earth has been used to good effect) but checking them out properly will require either getting pretty close or some fairly fancy camera work. I think the unpredictability of conditions and the requirement for fixed wing aircraft for endurance is going to make close up work a non-starter.
Personally I'd combine an Ardupilot and a gas-powered RC plane, but just to deal with the naysayers here is a turn-key solution with a built in camera, GPS, autopilot etc. and a ~50km range:
http://www.robotshop.com/ca/cropcam-unmanned-aerial-vehicle-uav.html
p.s. Drones are illegal in the USA IF AND ONLY IF the fly over 400ft. This is not generally enforced for non-commercial operators working outside of normal flight paths.
I would tend to agree - the iPhone (and most good android phones) have cool gadgets, but I would not rely on them for something like this. Altitude is much easier to accomplish with a static pressure sensor. HP Rocket folks have several sensors that might be useful. Featherweight Altimeters carries a model that is only a couple dozen grams that has a two axis accelerometer and barometer altimeter that's good to a couple of feet. It has temporary and latched relay outputs (good for about 30W and 10W respectively, I think) for firing pyro charges (parachute, for example) and turning on tracking beacons.
Actually, the whole set of electronics that rocket guys use would be good for the cheap and "expendible with regret" philosophy. For a few hundred dollars, he could build in a fairly lightweight recovery system. Can he recover it in the kind of terrain he's flying over? That's a question only he can answer, but $1000 in recovery gear could save tens of thousands of dollars in autonomous gear for the outlying conditions, and still let him recover a substantial investment with (hopefully) minimal damage.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
I've worked on autonomous robots for environmental monitoring for two years now. That doesn't make me an expert by any means, but it does provide me some insight which I'd like to pass along.
You could build a 20 cubic kilometer virtual box for the craft to fly inside of and set waypoints in that box. This is done on a small scale in automobiles already. The Toyota Prius, for example, uses a tiny box system for its self parking feature. This would avoid the GPS problem, or at least give you a backup. You could also set up a few beacons. Navigation isn't a real technical problem. You're big hurtle will be range.
Should one use a copter or airplane? Copter: Able to hover and be a little more stable, easier to take photos and such, yet more complex and likely more $$ Plane: Cheaper, easier, faster, but a little less reliable?
I am Jacks complete lack of Windows
the requirement in the FA solutionised into some sort of airborn system. The actual requirement seems to be to get up to date pictures of various conditions up in the mountains from multiple locations without the need to travel there. My solution would be to setup a load of automated cameras at key locations and get them to send you a picture at intervals.
I use cheapo chinese imported eBay "Little Acorn" cameras on my mountain bike trails. They are attached to trees and some of them have a SIM card in them so they can text/email me a photo either when their sensors trigger movement or if I program a schedule into them. I think the poster mentioned he was in France, so there should be mobile data coverage in the hills. They are reasonably high res (most are 12MP) and they run on AA batteries that last for 3 months or so. You can get battery extension packs that could last until "next summer" and then hike around and change the batteries twice a year. My cameras survived a couple of bad storms last winter and apart from a few strange pictures when ice froze onto the lens; all went well. I use bike chain locks on mine to lock them to trees etc.
they are cheap, at GBP £100 (E130ish) or so each - you could get 20 of them for the cheapest RC airplane solution and you don't need to worry about crashing an autonomous drone into a schoolbus etc.
Hi, the Chaos Radio Express 187 podcast http://cre.fm/cre187 (sorry podcast is in German), has good information about flying objects and drones (not just octocopters).
The Paparazzi project http://paparazzi.enac.fr/wiki/Main_Page provides the open source software modules to use.
Apparantly they build some "cheap drones" and provided them to the meteological community with quite success. Flying time was about 2 hours without a problem, so likely for your case its ideal.
A coward, but thats why I like to remain anonymous ;)
Do you guys still remember the "ask Slashdot with a sponsor" idea introduced some months ago? For one time there was a SourceForge dude commenting as a sidekick, but after that it seems to be ditched. Well, whatever.
The answers to those questions would give YOU enough information to answer his?
"No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up." -- Lily Tomlin
Honestly, some have hit around this but it's really the killer, autonomous flight. I don't know where the OP lives but autonomous vehicles of any kind are illegal for average citizens to operate outside a sanctioned, controlled environment. This includes academics doing research. You can't even get a car that drives itself and you want a plane with cameras? Clearly, OP is leaping without looking. Although a fun idea, this one will likely land you in a heap of legal trouble within days if not hours after it flies. Granted, in the U.S. the FAA is working on regulations for commercial UASs (http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/apl/aviation_forecasts/aerospace_forecasts/2012-2032/media/Unmanned%20Aircraft%20Systems.pdf) but who knows what will actually come of it. Right now, without proper certification and permissions in the U.S., illegal.
GPS does not echo, peaks block reception of signal to and from sats. You would need to find a transponder to find the aircraft if you lose it due to loss of this signal. The problem with gps tracks on devices is that accurate height is very hard for non military to determine as GPS is based on an idealized spheroid, not actual height. converting to distance from distance from center of planet for GEOID height is non trivial. One solution is to use synthetic digital terrains embedded in the operating system to reference but setting that up is also non trivial. The third option is to have a live operator with remote viewing thru video feed. GPS then would bthen e handy for locating the aircraft, this is the option the us mil uses so there you go. Missles use option 2
I have a regular RC Aircraft that I use to take aerial videos and they work out pretty well.
Here is an example:
http://vimeo.com/4400759
(turn down your sound, I am not video editor so the sound track is still in there and loud)
Drones are cool, but really not as safe regularly controlled RC Aircraft and even if you do get into drones you should really have regular RC aircraft experience so a set up like mine would be a very reasonable first step. The air frame I use is often used for diy drones so your investment will not be wasted if you start with a more traditional set up.
Wax on, wax off baby!
Certainly on-location is better, but in mountains the weather can vary dramatically in just a few kilometers. I've driven in the Cascades where I'm experiencing a beautiful 25 degree spring day with flowers blooming and birds chirping, and when you go around the corner of the mountain you find a valley full of snow. If I'd been walking I would have been extremely disappointed to have hiked all that way to find out that I had to turn back.
"Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
WiFi telescope on a mountain top http://hackaday.com/2008/06/10/wifi-telescope/ ?
The Open Pilot project makes great hardware/software and it's open source. Although the current generation does not meet your need for autonomous flight, the next version will have that capability: http://www.openpilot.org/products/openpilot-revolution-platform/
Probably less expensive and more reliable to install a collection of fixed monitoring stations, watching your favourite ~10 locations. Game cameras, zigbee pro mesh and a concentrator or two to get it back to your alpine cabin.
Yes, but if you can get some data before you go, you can eliminate trips which would obviously not succeed.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Yes you can. Jeez.
You could do it for 2-3 grand with effort.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
There's nothing on Earth that can do what you want.
I make unmanned aerial systems professionally. I disagree. Beside me is a helicopter UAS that could perform this mission.
Of course, the list price is about $350k.
results are random but pretty much eternal
come to think of it, that might make a great military program: camouflage. no one will guess the vultures are coopted spies
although, when the enemy gets paranoid about where the good intel against them is coming from and see something gleam off of a vulture's wing, they'll shoot down every vulture they see
not good for vultures. then again, war in general is good for vultures, so i guess it's wash from the vulture's POV
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
"I live in a remote alpine setting and would like to remotely monitor my pot plants to make sure nobody steals them, and I'd like to see how many there are and how they're armed before we hop in the truck and go ask them to leave the property."
I would like a jetpack...with laser cannons...made of gold...powered by a zero-point energy module...piloted by a velociraptor...on cocaine. Is this feasible?
Loud noises do not cause avalanches. That is an urban myth. Source: I am an avalanche safety instructor and an avalanche rescue team leader.
Looks like Hans Reiser got Internet access!
Wonder when reiserfs 5 will be released?
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
A cell phone interface with video camera on a 4 wire reel system like is used in the sports stadiums today. Wire length and winch power to be determined. Use solar collectors and batteries and you can cover a very large area with minimal need to visit. Alpine setting could de done without towers by placing winches on fixed mountain ledges.
Bad example.
Taking a shit can be a method of non-violent protest.
It just depends on where you're shitting.
I've been wanting for a long time to make a small blimp drone.
It would be trivial to make it takeoff and land and it would only need electricity/gas to change position.
I was thinking about a weather balloon with a payload consisting of a soekris single board computer with a couple webcams, a GPS and 3G adapter.
If you don't want to move it too much (or if you have fancy algorithms that use the winds as a mean of getting where you want) you could fly this thing for days.
BTW, the way to control the altitude with a blimp is like a submarine does by filling tanks with water. You need an air pump on the blimp that you'll use to fill balloons full a air to make your blimp heavier.
If there are roads to these locations, pay a neighborhood kid to ride his bike out and take a picture. Alternatively, put a camera on a carrier pigeon or some other type of capable bird. I'm sure you could also train a dog to walk to a certain location with a view.
Hello,
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We are using MicroPilot product in our drones.
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I'm sure it won't be legal, but maybe a mini powered glider that can unfold in flight (or from like a flare gun or something). Mounting cameras would be tricky, but basically thinking it can launch and then unfold at the peak and then use some minimal sensors and evasion while tracking a base point (you). So it can glide and take footage, but it maneuvers towards a fixed point. Won't cover the distance you want. The only way to get your distance is to somehow boost the RC signal and use a larger fuel tank than normal, but where you can still handle the weight, All this is neigh impossible to do without a lot of expense and testing, and will be on the edge of legal.
160Km/H
If you're just going to mangle units like this, why even include them? How Kelvin meters per Henry relate to flying, I don't know.
Now everything is a fucking drone even if that is exactly what it is: a Remote controlled airplane..
Their flight was made possible by (a) a 10,000' (or thereabouts) height for the RC transmitter antenna and (b) line-of-sight.
Put some mountainous obstructions in the way and/or use a ground-based RC transmitter (legal wattage) and then I'll be duly impressed.
Someone mentioned that with today's technology it can't be done.
BOLLOCKS.
I am nowhere near a professional FPV pilot and I could build this in a week.
The current world record for FPV flight is something like 30+km. Now here's the kicker: That's actually controlled flight using a ground-based LCD monitor and real-time video feed.
If you just want pure autonomy, you don't need that. You also don't need the costly RC transmitter to carry your servo/motor signals 20+ miles. You don't need the specialized plane- and ground-antennas to keep a reliable feed going. If you just want the drone to fly somewhere, filming and return, your job is magnitudes simpler.
All you need is an autopilot that supports GPS waypoints (look at Ruby and DragonLabs FPV gear).
As far as cameras are concerned, a full 1080p HD GoPro without the bombproof shell is 150g or so. They're also small. You can strap four to a 60" wingspan model plane easily.
Buy or build a nice glider-ish model plane that doesn't require massive airspeed to stay afloat. Put in marginal to moderate servos, motor and ESC and RC receiver. Your only quality products need to be the autopilot and camera if you so choose. You can get the plane in the air with gear only good for a mile and flip on the autopilot. It will do the rest of the work and return to base and hover over your head until you decide to land it.
Want some type of insurance on your investment? Write your name and phone number to the wing and state a reward if found. Install a lost-signal beeper, too. Insure all the gear with Squaretrade. I have toasted two GoPros and some RC FPV gear and Squaretrade has always covered it.
Email me for more info snoopy72 at hotmail no spam dot com
http://www.faa.gov/about/initiatives/uas/uas_faq/index.cfm?print=go#Qn2 Doesn't address any Line-of-Sight issues. Aside from the autonomous part, I just wanted to note that with an Amateur Radio license you can setup a remote control capable of beyond LOS, along with a video link. Amateur TV transmitters in the 70cm or higher range are available and you can watch them on your old NTSC TV. You could use 6m/50mhz for the control link which has capability beyond LOS, or through the use of a repeater station you could expand that range further (heck, use a balloon mounted repeater over your operation position to increase your LOS distance and you could use all sorts of LOS frequencies and equipment) Or, I guess you could go the other way, and build some high end optics and get them aboard the next AMSAT bird and send the photos back via SSTV or ATV. :D
yes, but only if your home drone signs a pre-nup
Thanks for that information. My next question would concern whether the actual electronics in an iPhone (or something similar) are being used to the maximum. There's a lot of chips operating at less-than-capacity in bottom-end graphics cards, PC's and the like. The manufacturer puts the same chip in everything, and disables part of its capacity in the firmware. Wouldn't it be neat if somebody a lot more educated than me took a very close look at a smart phone and found out that was the case? It would certainly help fill in any gaps left by the devices you mention...if that was necessary .
Again, thanks for understanding exactly what I meant and giving me a really good answer. I'm not about to build something like that myself, but I'm very interested in what's actually possible instead of the usual, breathless, "gee-whiz" stuff we're subjected to in the popular press.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
there are so many comments on a airplane design for a drone. Maybe a quadracopter/8 rotor heli? It could lift the payload he wants with 2 cameras, maneuver tough terrian, should last the 20km and back. I would think a predestined course would be best in his situation. Fly it like a remote heli where you want it to go and capture what you want and then send it home and call it "route 1" or something. Then just let it fly its route when you want it to. Of course there are checks on if it gets off course and all with wind and if it went down it emits mayday...think past the tiny details and think of the overall main idea of the quadracopter idea...I think it is brilliant.
http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2759981&cid=39547369
and even moreso, here:
http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2759981&cid=39548919
Perhaps you ought to not try take on your betters n' troll 'em, eldorel. U got your ass kicked for it, hard.
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