Northwest Aerospace News February | March 2018 Issue No. 1 | Page 38

T acAero worked with its customer, Insitu, to get imagery of the fires this summer. Insitu is working to expand commercial applications of its UAVs, and in some cases, the drones work very well. But TacAero’s approach has advantages, Prange said. Standard color image of location of a water drop from a helicopter. For starters, there’s the simple fact that TacAero has a manned aircraft—the TopCub or sometimes a trusty Cess- na—with a human pilot. That means there are fewer Federal Aviation Administration restrictions about how and where it can fly and what types of other aircraft it can fly around, com- pared to a UAV. This is the same area as the top picture, but in ther- mal imaging (the darker trees are the ones that have cold water on them from the helicopter drop, identifying where the drop actually occurred since you can’t see it in the top picture) In some cases, TacAero’s manned flights were able to observe helicop- ter water drops to see how close they were getting to the actual flames on the ground—and live-stream that infrared video imagery to incident commanders on the ground. “We could get over the fires before the helicopters,” Wells said. This shows the thermal imaging view of the Indian Creek Fire in July 2017 (compare to the bottom corner inset of the same picture to see what you see from the plane - nothing but smoke - the thermal imagery sees heat through smoke layers) And since most drones are developed with military uses in mind, they’ve got very specific capabilities that aren’t always as effective in civilian use, Prange said. Adapted military drones can effectively track a vehicle driving through traffic or even a person in a crowd, but in a wildfire situation, it’s less important for an incident com- mander to be able to zero in on one specific tree than it is for that com- mander to be able to see the entire forest. This kind of interplay of UAVs and manned aircraft— taking advantage of the strengths of each—will only become more common. The same will be true over the next couple years as forest and recreation managers oversee the restoration of the forest. “It’s a really exciting time to be in the industry,” Prange said. “Aviation at large is going to be evolving far quick- er than we can imagine. The market has spoken and technology is pushing.” 38 NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS Devon Wells Aviation Services 844-FLY-CUBS Ext 710 www.tacaero.com