Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-04-08 18:39:42| Engadget

Battery life has long been a key limiting factor in drone use. Although there are commercial models that can stay aloft for 45 minutes or longer on a single charge, being able to keep drones in the air for longer would be helpful for many purposes. Researchers at the University of Southern Denmark have been working on that issue for several years by developing drones that can recharge directly from power lines. This time around, the scientists attached a gripper system to a Tarot 650 Sport drone, which they customized with a electric quadcopter propulsion system, an autopilot module and other components. When the drone's systems detect that the battery is running low, the device employs its camera and millimeter-wave radar system to pinpoint the closest power line, as New Atlas notes. The drone then flies up to the power line from underneath, using a pair of inward-sloping arms to guide the cable into the gripper. An inductive charger pulls current from the power line. When the battery is full, the gripper opens and the drone continues on its way. At the outset, the idea is for drones that inspect power lines to use this charging system. The researchers first showed off a self-charging drone that tops up its battery from power lines in 2022. This time around, they improved the gripper system and demonstrated a real-world use case for the tech. In a paper they're presenting at next month's IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, the team described the project as "to the best of our knowledge, a first-in-the-world system with the ability to sustain operation throughout many inspection/charging cycles powered by energy harvesting from power lines in a real outdoor environment." In arguably the most successful test, the drone stayed aloft for over two hours through five cycles of power line inspection and charging. Drones have been used for years to monitor and inspect power lines. They're particularly useful in remote areas, such as mountain tops, where examining power lines manually is a tough ask. Still, it's hard not to feel a little uneasy about drones clamping onto power lines. If anything goes wrong and a drone somehow ends up damaging a power line, an entire region could lose electricity. Charging pads for drone exist and may be a safer option, but they'd require extra space for infrastructure.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/drones-that-charge-on-power-lines-may-not-be-the-best-idea-163942109.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

02.05Take-Two is shutting down the studios behind Rollerdrome and Kerbal Space Program 2
02.05Snapchat will finally let you edit your chats
01.05A researcher is suing Meta for the right to turn off Facebooks news feed
01.05Microsofts OpenAI partnership was born from Google envy
01.05Explore Starfield's barren planets at 60 fps on Xbox Series X starting this month
01.05PS5 update will let you invite people to multiplayer games through your smartphone's apps
01.05Block reportedly greenlit transactions involving terrorist groups and sanctioned nations
01.05May's PlayStation Plus games include Ghostrunner 2 and the modern classic Tunic
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

02.05Malta: DIER Launches Employment Agencies Web Portal - Camilleri Preziosi Advocates
02.05Egypt: Egyptian Competition Authority Investigates Telecommunications Company - Bremer FZ-LLC
02.05United States: Department Of Labor's Final Salary Rule Dramatically Increases Scope Of Overtime Eligibility - Bracewell
02.05UK: Charity Commission Inquiries: Top Takeaways For Charities - Bates Wells
02.05Bermuda: Trusts, And How They Came To Be - Appleby
02.05United States: How Operational Inefficiencies Are Costing You Opportunities And Profits - Week 1 - Alvarez & Marsal
02.05United States: Conversations With Anthony Caporrino | Episode 1 (Podcast) - Alvarez & Marsal
02.05United States: Cherry Blossoms, Negotiated Rulemakings, And Health Care Legislative Priorities On Capitol Hill (Podcast) - Arnold & Porter
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .