Pteryx UAV

Pteryx UAV[1] is a Polish Miniature UAV designed for civilian use, manufactured and sold by TriggerComposites.[2] The machine can be classified both as flying RC model and pre-programmed vehicle. It has received a medal for innovative design in the category of micro-enterprises of the Podkarpacie region: Innowator Podkarpacia 2010.[3][4]

Pteryx UAV, a civilian UAV for aerial photography and photomapping with roll-stabilised camera head. Note this time the camera is mounted sideways for oblique photography.

Origin

It uses a custom derivation of FLEXIPILOT, designed by AerialRobotics engineering group[5] for photomapping purposes and civilian use in general.

Avionics and flying platform are designed from ground-up with the idea of having full operational capability without using any active transmitter nor a groundstation. If there was transmission system operating possibly at powers around 500 mW ÷ 5 W (depending on system and frequency band), the UAV would require special permissions from the users, varying greatly from country to country.

Capabilities

Digital Surface Model of motorway interchange construction site
Bezmiechowa airfield 3D Digital Surface Model
4.5km2 ortophotomap extracted from data collected during 1h flight

(example: Bezmiechowa 3D model[6])

  • Delivering data for precision agriculture obtaining surface maps using mosaicking software
  • Construction site and long range linear mapping (up to around 40 km both ways with 2h flight time, reserve included)

(example: Motorway construction site mapping mission[7]) often requiring georeferencing of the data obtained

  • Carrying custom research equipment

The camera mount contains either pre-installed compact digital camera, or is left for the user for integration.

The camera can be mounted down-looking (nadir photography) or side-looking (oblique photography).

The whole head can be also tilted in flight using RC transmitter, while reducing stabilization travel to one of the sides.

Features

Its features among miniature (sub-5 kg TOW) civilian UAVs include roll-stabilised camera head, fully integrated parachute and Rotary Mission Selector. Key design requirements included:

  • flying multiple missions per day without reprogramming the autopilot (the waypoints being selected by mission selector and evaluated relative to takeoff)
  • ability to rearrange camera head interior with minimal effort
  • single button operation
  • no need for groundstation
  • enclosing the camera for better protection against dirt
  • ability to accommodate most powerful compact digital camera models, weight range 200...1000g
  • Takeoff: using bungee, or bungee with rails. Fully automatic takeoff triggered by holding Start button and automatic preflight testing.
  • Landing: using parachute deployed automatically (possible forced opening using RC transmitter), aircraft style belly landing in automatic mode (only when reusing a single airfield, about 250x100m area required without obstacles on approach) or in manual mode (same as flying RC models).

Precision

(manufacturer's data)

The aircraft provides positions of the photos taken, more than 8000 events can be recorded. Ground-projected positions include the following errors:

  • GPS position error up to 5m, usually around 2.5m, this is typical for GPS mounted on flying vehicles.
  • Altitude drift (up to 5m per 1 hour of flight)
  • Camera head stabilisation precision (transients up to 5 deg, typically 2 deg)
  • Fuselage pitch due to turbulence (up to 8 deg during hot weather, typically 2 deg in winter)
  • Camera mounting error (typically 1-4deg if not calibrated)
  • Heading/yaw error (the aircraft performs crabbing in presence of wind)

Those errors nullify themselves during stitching and ortorectification of the images. The use of a roll-stabilised head increases useful area coverage (reducing distortion at map edges) and improving stitch quality inside during turbulent weather. In order to obtain georeferenced maps, it is necessary to provide positions of the object on-site or simply viewing the stitched image in Google earth (accepting occasional 50m position error vs true coordinates, but usually correct dimensions).

Typical orthophotomap precision (mean reprojection errors):

  • 10 cm horizontal
  • 30 cm vertical
  • around 2..5m global shift to be removed with a few locally measured points

The precision of an orthophotomap created with professional processing chain depends on Ground Sampling Distance or Ground Pixel Size (variable 5 cm/pixel to 20 cm/pixel depending on flight altitude). With Ground Control Points provided, horizontal accuracy of the map as a whole improves from a few meters to GSD (5 cm to 20 cm). Vertical accuracy of produced DSM (always internally generated for orthorectification) is in the order of 3 GSD, i.e. 15 cm to 60 cm. Regardless of the use of Ground Control Points, the map is self-consistent geometrically within 1 GSD.

Data processing strategies

Several data processing approaches are possible depending on application:

  • Direct photo examination
  • Non-georeferenced image stitching using free software
  • Using free 3D modelling services, as mentioned in examples section
  • Importing each photo as ground overlay in Google Earth (semi-automatic with supplied software)
  • Using pre-paid service based on cloud computing, yielding a result in hours (delivers ortophotomap and optionally DSM)
  • Local processing using specialised GIS software created specifically for large scale image mosaicking (delivers ortophotomap and optionally DSM)

System components

  • Fuselage
  • 3-section wings with mounting screws
  • Horizontal stabilizer section
  • Parachute

User's equipment

General characteristics

Masses:

Dimensions:[8][9]

V speeds:

  • VC: around 50 km/h
  • VS: 34–38 km/h depending on TOW
  • VA: 120 km/h
  • VNE: 160 km/h

Flight altitude:

Handling:

  • Assembly time: Around 5min (only 2 screws and no electrical connections).
  • Materials: Custom fiberglass composite material covered with durable red gelcoat, carbon fiber and kevlar reinforcements, wood and other plastics. A choice of wooden or all-composite wings with styrofoam core, painted and waterproof.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-01-12. Retrieved 2020-05-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Trigger Composites
  3. http://www.tvp.pl/rzeszow/edukacyjne/innowacyjne-podkarpackie/wideo/712/3549204 Polish TVP educational clip
  4. "Laureaci i Wyróżnieni w konkursie Innowator Podkarpacia 2010". www.archiwum.podkarpackie.pl. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  5. AerialRobotics
  6. "Bezmiechowa 3D digital elevation model (AerialRobotics and CMP SfM Web Service)". Archived from the original on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  7. Motorway mapping mission (YouTube video)
  8. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-03. Retrieved 2011-03-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-03. Retrieved 2011-03-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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