Sky-high innovation takes flight 🚀🌍✨

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Sky-high innovation takes flight 🚀🌍✨"


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INVENTORS ARE TRANSFORMING INFRASTRUCTURE INSPECTIONS WITH THE HYLIGHT, A HELIUM-FILLED DRONE DIRIGIBLE, AND THE AÉRONDE, AN INNOVATIVE BALLOON AIRCRAFT French inventors are steaming ahead


with ideas for lighter-than-air projects, with one for a drone dirigible, suitable for inspecting electricity lines, railways and pipelines, raising €3.7 million to help it get certified by


authorities. Called the Hylight, the helium gas-filled drone will be 12 metres long and powered by a fuel-cell generating electricity for its two motors.  It will carry a full range of


cameras and sensors, and be able to cover around 300 km a day, being guided by a pre-loaded map linked with GPS systems. “The interest is to be able to go slowly and at the same time to be


able to photograph in very high resolution down to a millimetre or so, so that if there are any problems detected, the engineers can have a good look and decide what to do,” Martin Bocken,


the company CEO and one of three co-founders told The Connexion. LONG FLIGHT TIME At the moment electricity lines in rural France are inspected every couple of years by helicopters which


have to fly low over them and have a pilot and a photographer who takes photos of any likely problems they see. “Using a drone like ours will be safer, much quieter and much better for the


environment because a helicopter puts out a tonne of carbon dioxide every hour of flight,” said Mr Bocken. The Hylight will be able to fly in winds of up to 40kph, and one tank of hydrogen


will last for 10 hours of flight. It is stored in a trailer which can also act as an operations room and workshop – allowing different sensors to be swapped on the aircraft for a variety of


jobs. Six prototypes have already been built, and the final version should be certified for commercial work in the next two years, and start earning money for the company in 2026.  The


airships will be built at the company’s headquarters at a private airstrip just south of Paris. Read more: How you can fly to Nice, Paris, Marseille, or Bordeaux from the cockpit Another


innovative project, with a 15-metre circumference doughnut-shaped balloon, and with battery-powered electric motors like those found on a drone, had its first flight from Grenoble Airport in


the winter, and has flown test flights regularly since then. Called the Aéronde, the device is designed for two people and is aiming to be certified this summer under the rules for


microlight aircraft, which are not as strict as for heavier aeroplanes. Again, inspecting electricity and other networks is seen as being one of its uses, but the inventors also see it being


sold to private pilots who have microflight licences. “Up in the Alps near us there are lots of hydro-electric dams which have power lines and high pressure water pipes that are very


difficult to get to,” inventor and CEO Nicolas Sorin told The Connexion. Read more: Delivery of medicines by drone tested in south-west France “We see some leisure use but our business plan


is based on being able to provide inspection and repair services – drones are ideal for inspection but getting an engineer on the ground or right next to the wire so he can fix it needs


something like our wonderful machine!” The Aéronde can fly at around 20kph for four hours before its batteries need to be recharged, or it can rest for eight hours, with its motors keeping


it steady against winds of up to 20kph. Machines are customisable for specific purposes, and will probably cost €300,000 each.


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