3D Robotics

3689595411?profile=original
3D Robotics congratulates John Blaske, an aerospace engineering student at San Diego State University, who spent a spring internship at 3DR successfully designing and building a waterproof, submersible quadcopter—an amphibious drone he calls the Aqua Quad.

John started his career with the Marine Corps’ surveying detachment, where he gained valuable GIS experience. Following an honorable discharge in 2013, John, an abiding RC and flight enthusiast, enrolled in SDSU’s Aerospace Engineering program and soon developed an interest in drone technology.

“My first real encounter with fully autonomous drones was through 3DR,” John said. “Joe and Grant took me out to test fly the Aero. I was impressed with the precision of its autonomy and the versatility of Mission Planner, and immediately got hooked.”

The Aqua Quad started with the long-term goal of making a drone that could be submersible and controllable underwater, but could then surface, take off, and fly around. That’s a tall order, and John had little more than a month to work with, so he started with designing a waterproof quad. 3DR gave him an Iris to modify, and by SDSU’s Engineering Design Day—one month’s time—John had proved the waterproof concept and delighted the Dean of the Aerospace Department.

3DR hopes to further develop our internship program to empower more talented and passionate students like John, offering them a forum to apply learned concepts beyond the classroom. “There’s going to be a huge need for engineers like myself once the market takes off,” John said. “I’m already a step ahead with what I’ve done here at 3DR.”

Please join us in congratulating John on his hard work and success!

E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of diydrones to add comments!

Join diydrones

Comments

  • Pedala 2 pedala....Really,you know what iwe build in the past??WHAT EXACTLY IS WRONG,can you please tell me??do you know how difficult is to make submarine witch is submersible? No you don't,,,things that fly are to light to go under water, cannot carry ballast tanks,what about pressure under 2m.......also how do you control it under the water??!! radiocontrol, cabel or some other technique ??controllable under water???how...does quad motors tilt like on VTOL?or there is extra motors??getting to surface will be easy and than take of...as I said before DONT be ridiculous..everything I said is right,almost nothing in bold letters is possible at the moment...when somebody invest some $$$$ and time,lots of time than that will be possible one nice day eventualy

  • @Emin, just because YOU haven't personally built it or thought of it does not make it impractical or impossible. Pretty much everything you just said is wrong.  All of which is possible.

  • Is Jake Wells around here? ;)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN61RANENGw

    the BoxCopter was a really fun proyect

  • here is another from DEX....frame only around 2000$

    http://www.flyfreak.net/multirotor/da-li-da-ga-poletim-ili-po/

    MultiRotor - page 1 - FlyFreak
  • https://vimeo.com/67008941

  • it will never be submersible, where is ballast tanks..etc...only thing you can do is adding 2 servodriven water motors from RC boats to control movement when u land on sea surface....

  • what about esc heat??baro inside....if waterproofing is so easy we would all do it....and frames like that would not cost a fortune... http://www.quadh2o.com/store/quadh2o-kits/quadh2o-single-color-kit-...

    or RTF in stock in one of the most expensive RC shop on Earth...

    http://kopterworx.com/shop/rtf-ready-to-fly/beginner-model/quad-h2o...

  • ...."making a drone that could be submersible and controllable underwater, but could then surface, take off, and fly around"....are you serius?!that's impossible at the moment,not even Navy and Airforce can do it with all the $$$$$$ they have...step ahead...don't be ridiculous....you sound like kids from elementary school...

  • Aquad..... Yes, that would have been a great name!
  • Envious. I chose the wrong career.
This reply was deleted.