I’m on their website looking at requirements, DSLR Camera with 600mm telephoto lense, that’s NOPE #1 for me,
Oh yeah....I forgot about that one.
$6,000 Matterport camera, NOPE #2 or a Leica BLK360 camera which Amazon can’t find, RF Meter, ok only $75 but not required by the other 2 companies I fly for.
RF meter? Interesting. I can kind of see that for older drones. The newer drones don't have near the interference problems from the days of yore.
I splurged for an insta360 camera for the last company I onboarded with. $4,500 Mavic 3 Enterprise + 8 batteries would be NOPE #3 if I didn’t already have it.
Yep...same here on that one. The drone I fly is an M300, but I don't own it. My business partner does. He owns the LiDAR unit, as well.
I think I’m done buying specific camera equipment.
I hear ya.
These employers need flexibly to accept what I have. If the 52X zoom my M3E has isn’t good enough for ground photos when flight is restricted, oh well. There are other basic requirements that can be expected like OSHA-10, hard hat, vest, a phone blah blah stuff we already have.
I generally wear what I call a "dork vest" when I fly (dayglo safety vest). The only reason is because it makes me look official so people leave me alone. I hate wearing hard hats. I'll wear one on an ACTUAL job site, but NOT flying a drone. I wear socks and sandals and maybe shorts or cargo pants. I don't like being told what to wear - especially when wearing it laughs in the face of common sense. I'm not sure what's going to hit me in the head while flying a drone. And if I fly my own drone into my own head, well...maybe I've chosen the wrong career...LOL....
Yeah I hear ya on the ai bs. F ai. Skydio is already flying ai. F Skydio as long as I’m at it. Skydio and Elise Stefanik is why we are looking at a DJI ban. You’d think these companies would be looking for drone requirements other than DJI drones. Come next month, we’ll see how many drone jobs and companies Congress is going to destroy. DJI already stopped sending drones and parts to the USA.
Funny...I already own all the drones I will ever need. I don't crash, so I don't need spare parts. I have spare props, of course. But I haven't replaced a prop in years.
Thats kind of NOPE #4 for anyone thinking about getting into this from scratch. By the way, it’s like $180-$200 payout per tower which takes 1.5-2 hours on site per tower for anyone who’s wondering. And then there’s all the time it takes to upload your 500-1,500 photos you took ug.
Yep...assuming nothing goes wrong...<:^/ What I like about my work is I count on me and only me 100%. If someone else screws something up, it's a change order and bill for it. The caveat, of course, is if I screw up, it's out of my pocket. So far, in 10 years, only one screw up <knock on wood>. I had one mapping job where the
P4P camera had focus issues that I didn't notice until I pulled them up on a 36" 4K monitor. "Slightly soft" is how I would have described them. I flew that job, again, at my expense.
Who knows what this company will pay. $200 for me is bottom dollar for this work plus all the driving. Harley dude, if you’re billing out 5-9 times this, please let me be your Padawan Master Jedi!
Regarding your last sentence, look to aerial mapping and, if you can afford to get into it, aerial LiDAR. THAT, my friend, is where it's at. THAT is where you will make good money flying a drone. I occasionally do aerial traffic analysis, which is basically parking the drone at a specific point in space over and over for 3 hours and hitting the record button. The traffic gigs are in 15-minute blocks. 4 minutes on, 11 off. Those gigs bill out at roughly $200/hour, but is boring as hell. I now bring my laptop to play Solitaire or Sudoku to pass the time. I make sure I have line of sight of the drone, of course.
These days I do roughly 4-6 gigs a month and have been for about 10 years. So, I guess, technically, I've been semi-retired for 10 years.
Actual flight time on my last gig was roughly 34 minutes total flight time. But there's more to mapping than the actual flight. I spend about an hour or more building missions, looking for viable launch points, etc. Then after the flight I organize the data. Most times it's about 40GB. This last flight was no exception, as they wanted video, too, of the flight lines (a first). It was almost an hour drive each way. I left 9AM and was back a little after noon. So you figure an hour prep, 2 hours travel, an hour on site, another hour processing data. Spread over 2 or 3 days if I'm feeling lazy. Roughly 5 hours total. I billed that out @ $1800. That comes to $360/hour. Not all jobs are that lucrative. On average I bill out $250-$300/hour. But some gigs I bill out as low as $150/hour, but that is rare, and never any lower than that.
The thing is, this is work I love. My clients are male engineers, so communication is terse, succinct, accurate, objective and to the point. They send specifications, KML's (or KMZ's) via email, I build the mission, fly it, and deliver deliverables. The best part is that I get to work outside, but only when the weather is nice. No rain, of course. And I don't usually fly on cloudy days, either, but sometimes I do. If it's too cold or hot I'll fly from inside the cab, but that's rare. I like being outdoors and in the sunshine. It's good work. But it's definitely a house of cards. One screw-up and it's on me. I live by the 6 P's; Prior Planning Prevents Piss-Poor Performance." Good times.
D