Linebird, a drone technology company on a mission to revolutionize electric transmission line maintenance, announced the launch of its Osprey Nonconductive Payload System, known as Osprey NPS.
The debut of the new drone technology is supported by SensorLink Corporation, Linebird’s lead investor, and will make live-line work safer, more time efficient, and more accessible by leveraging the power of unmanned aerial systems.
“After years of development and collaboration with industry partners and field workers, Linebird is proud to launch our patent pending Osprey NPS that takes live-line contact measurements on transmission infrastructure using modified linemen’s tools,” said Michael Beiro, founder and CEO of Linebird. “The launch of the Osprey NPS couldn’t come at a better time. As power systems age, failures will increase. Our goal is to solve this problem by providing safe, practical and cost-effective means for assessing the health of critical power grid infrastructure in an entirely new way.”
Conductor splices and dead-end connections are critical points of failure on transmission lines. Each year power line failures result in millions of dollars of revenue losses, power outages, property damage, wildfires, injuries, and even loss of life. As a result, power lines require periodic assessment, previously only possible using costly and high-liability manned methods. As an example, helicopters are often used to perform visual and infrared (IR) thermal inspections that frequently miss deteriorated connections due to IR “masking effects,” such as wind cooling and low loading on power lines. In addition, ground-based inspections using linemen climbing poles and/or bucket trucks are time inefficient and costly. Osprey NPS by Linebird provides a solution by fundamentally changing the way utility companies perform tests on live conductors, allowing for direct contact work to be accomplished using unmanned aerial platforms.
Osprey NPS combines Ohmstik measurement technology by SensorLink Corporation with the capability of unmanned aerial systems to improve power grid reliability and resilience, drastically improving the safety and reducing cost factors of utility inspection and maintenance. Ohmstik™ measures the condition of a connector (its electrical resistance) without any “masking effects.” Osprey NPS also allows utility companies to gain actionable data on infrastructure around the world.
“SensorLink products have been at the forefront of high-voltage line inspection for 20 years, and we are proud to partner with Linebird. With continued collaboration, it is now possible to revolutionize the task of live-line work using unmanned aerial systems, and we are excited to see our product at the leading edge of this advanced grid innovation,”
said Gary Hielkema, president of SensorLink Corporation.
The debut of Linebird’s system will result in a low-cost, safe and cost-effective means for trained line crews to perform splice and dead-end connector inspections with the Ohmstik. The equipment is easily loaded into a small truck without the deployment and costs of heavy equipment, while keeping personnel out of harm’s way. Rapid transport and deployment of the system will give line crews additional tools in their arsenal. In addition, the condition assessment data will provide critical data for maintenance and construction planning, as well as budgeting.
“From the perspective of more than 40 years as a transmission standards engineer, reliability leader, R&D project manager and engineering consultant, I recognize the improvements that electric utilities, the public, and public utility commissions will realize from Linebird’s Osprey NPS,” said Joe Renowden, P.E., president of JDR Engineering. “Benefits of the Osprey NPS with SensorLink’s Ohmstik include increased safety of power line inspection, including reduction of hazards to the public, linemen, and liability. It will also increase reliability and resilience, preventing customer outages and fault current damage to expensive capital equipment such as circuit breakers and transformers.”
Source: Press Release