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Using fixed wing RPAS in emergencies and crisis Sorin Dumitru Solutions Consultancy Lead, Teamnet

EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

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Page 1: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Using fixed wing RPAS in emergencies and crisis

Sorin Dumitru

Solutions Consultancy Lead, Teamnet

Page 2: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Drones terminology

• UAV = Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

• RPAS = Remotely Piloted Aircraft System

• UAS = Unmanned Aircraft System

Page 3: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

For hard to reach and dangerous environments, and to reduce costs

Why RPAS?

Page 4: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Manned helicopter and fixed wing

Unmanned multirotor and fixed wing

Alternatives

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Manned helicopter and fixed wing(1-5t)

Helicopter Airplane

Initial cost 15M+ EUR 0.5-2M EUR

Maintenance cost Very high High

Operation & insurance cost 5000 – 7000 EUR / flight hour* 1500 – 3000 EUR /flight hour*

Pilot life risk Medium to high Medium to high

Operational efficiency High Medium to high

Operational flexibility High Medium to high

Real time transmission With additional equipment With additional equipment

* Higher costs are expected for flights during difficult missions

Data source: internal study

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Unmanned multirotor and fixed wing(1-20kg)

Multirotor UAV Fixed wing “mini” UAV system

Initial cost 1-10K EUR 0.3-1M EUR

Maintenance cost Very low Low to very low

Operation & insurance cost <500 EUR / flight hour <500 EUR / flight hour

Pilot life risk NA NA

Operational efficiency Very high Very high

Operational flexibility Very high Very high

Real time transmission Optional Yes

Maximum speed 40 km/h 200 km/h

Endurance <45 min <180 min

Range (video and telemetry) 3 – 5 km 15 – 30 km

Data source: internal study

Page 7: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Exampleof auto piloted fixed wingenterprise RPA SystemAir vehicle, ground control station, data link terminal, takeoff, landing

Entire system should be easily carried in a 4x4 vehicle

Page 8: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Air vehicle

Composite materials (e.g. fiberglass, carbon fiber)

and usually has a modular structure:

• Wings, winglets;

• Battery pack(s);

• Propulsion system;

• Payload.

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Enterprise RPAS specsWingspan: 2 to 4 m

Length: 1 to 2 m

Noise: 35 to 90+ dB

Maximum Take Off Weight

1 to 20 kg (“mini” cat.)

Maximum Speed

up to 200 km/h

Cruise Speed

up to 150 km/h

Service Ceiling

up to 3000 m ASL

Autonomy

0.5 to 5 h

Take off

Launcher, hand, runway

Landing

Parachute, runway

Max. Payload weight:

up to 2 kg

Propulsion: Electrical or

internal combustion

Page 10: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

• Daylight camera (video);

• Thermal imaging camera (IR, video);

• High definition camera (stills);

• Multispectral camera (visible light, IR and more);

• Specialized sensors (e.g. chemical, radiological);

• Drop-off mechanism.

Usual payloads

Page 11: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

GCS – GroundControl Station

• Missions planning and control;

• Changing flight plans during the missions;

• Self test, launch and recovery;

• View mission data (control data, video stream);

• Offline mission replay;

• Relay data to C2 or PSAP;

• Automated flight missions (e.g.: follow target)

Page 12: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Data link terminal

A high gain antenna that tracks the aircraft and provides:

• Transmission of mission and ground controls to aircraft;

• Reception of aircraft data;

• Transmission of payload control data;

• Reception of video and payload data;

It provides the real time video streaming range (up to 30km).

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Takeoff

• Hand launch;

• Vehicle launch;

• Catapult;

• Runway.

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Landing

• Parachute;

• Cable (crane or secondary multirotor RPAS);

• Runway.

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Search and rescue, floods, wild fires, border surveillance

Scenarios

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Search and Rescue• Fast and effective;

• Interoperable with other mobile and fixed forces

• High resolution real time aerial images;

• Can be integrated with PSAPs;

• Visual information on the victims’ condition.

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SAR – Search and Rescue exercise

Page 18: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Floods

• Propagation prediction and warning;

• Search and rescue;

• Damage assessment;

• Aid drop-off;

• Can be integrated with PSAPs.

Number of houses affected 234 Number of people affected 512 Maximum water depth 1.32 m Dykes affected 73 m

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Wild fires

• Detection

• Suppression

• Post fire monitoring

• Can be integrated with PSAPs

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Border surveillance

• Rescuing refugees;

• Day and night surveillance.

• Can be integrated with PSAPs;

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Integrating RPAS in PSAPs

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Recommendations

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Legal, safety, operational

• Local procedure requirements and smart airspace segregation- the solution for regulatory

framework

• RPAS should be complementary to manned air vehicles;

• Flight missions are being transformed:

• Search => unmanned;

• Rescue => manned;

• Mission allocations and flight sectors;

• Training is needed for RPAS operators (successful missions require hands-on experience);

• Spare parts, maintenance and support;

Page 25: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Key features

Key features:

• Integration with C2 (video and control);

• Video for acting fast, HD images to better see details;

• “Up in the air” time;

• Transmission range;

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RPAS – a solution for hard to reach and dangerous

environments, and for reducing costs.

Conclusion

Page 27: EENA 2016 - Drones deployments (1/3)

Q&ASorin Dumitru – [email protected]