Commercial use of drones in farms and other agriculture
Hexa with Hobbywing X8 motors
Hii am building a hexacopter with1.) hobbywing x8 motors2.) flight controller pixhawk PX53.) battery 12s 22Ah4.) wheel base of around 1800mm5.) estimated weight around 17kg without payloadi am looking if anyone has already tuned this type so i can get a head start. looking forwardthank youMike
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Is there anything happening to commercialize this technology? e.g. offering real time image analysis services for farmers ? I would be interested in the current status, thanks.
Hi Scott, what airframe / platform are you using for all that? Plane or 'copter? I'm curious about your setup. Thanks for any info. - Jim
Both, we fly a sony nex5 for EO and a TetraCam ADC Micro for NIR NDVI images on the same flight. To give both perspectives to the farmer.
HI
What are the fundamental needs of an agriculture UAV? (ie. Would it be purely a aerial perspective, or the post image processing)
LanMark, inreference to the app that you are using, I looked at the website and thumbed through it, but I couldnt find anything in the area of georectifying any of the images. Is it possible to do that with the Image J app?
Hi, all - a few links and leads you may be interested in:
DIY, open source NDVI (and NDVI alternatives) with a single or dual camera, with instructions to do it yourself (also planning to do a $95 point & shoot IR/VIS camera):
http://publiclab.org/wiki/near-infrared-camera
http://kickstarter.com/projects/publiclab/infragram-the-infrared-ph...
There's a web app being developed to do the processing: http://infrapix.pvos.org (prototype stage, but progressing fast)
Finally, for manual stitching (which is very reasonable and fast, and quite precise when done properly) you can use the free online (and open source) MapKnitter.org, also created/provided by Public Lab. I just lets you align images individually with a base map, and outputs projected GeoTiffs.
Most of us at Public Lab are doing this from kites and balloons which can fly much higher and lift much more than a UAV so we often get whole fields in just a few photos, so this approach is fast for few photos. It may not fit your use case but give it a shot.