A new program in Kansas is working to find ways to use drones to help with bridge and tower inspections. The Kansas Unmanned Aerial Systems program was created to help several state agencies tap into drone technology to improve processes and save money. Test flights began this month to help the Kansas Department of Transportation’s bridge inspection teams. UAS Director Bob Brock says using drones will help improve the safety of KDOT workers. "We put an awful lot of manpower into each bridge inspection and have to physically put a person in the air over a moving river or even near traffic at times that may be unnecessary," he says. Using drones to help with bridge inspections could also improve KDOT’s budget. Brock says one inspection costs about $4600, and using an unmanned system has the potential to get the cost under $1000. For the first test flight, a UAS operator launched a drone from a riverbank and sent it within three feet from the bottom of a bridge. "What this was able to do
↧