Close Up Drone Inspection of Verizon Wireless Cell Phone Tower DJI Mavic Pro

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2017
  • Like and Subscribe if you want to see new Videos Posted Weekly.
    Filmed By: Jordan Mowbray
    This video is copyrighted. Do not use without prior permission

Комментарии • 72

  • @UkrainianBazooka
    @UkrainianBazooka 3 года назад +9

    T-Mobile is on that tower too. The antennas with the vents on the left of the booms are AIR-32 antennas, only used by t-mo. They weigh about 180 lbs each compared to the Verizon antennas at about 60 lbs. The Verizon site appears to be really outdated. There's a ton of old coax on it, most sites started running only 6 coax lines for onstar and a big hybrid cable(power and fiber optics) up the tower to radio heads that are mounted by the antennas. Those transmit the power to the antennas via smaller coax cables. Much more space efficient, much easier to build, and much easier to troubleshoot/repair issues when they arise.

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for the information! That is very interesting

    • @user-qn6yt3zx3w
      @user-qn6yt3zx3w Год назад

      What kind of optics? SM or MM fiber?

  • @chrisbrown7985
    @chrisbrown7985 3 года назад +8

    That light blinking is flash technology and it should be above the antennas. They call that a crows nest.

    • @CreeseDF
      @CreeseDF 2 года назад +1

      yeah, for sure. I don't think that's allowed to be like that next to the antennas

    • @adamgerald849
      @adamgerald849 2 года назад +1

      You're right that is called the tower beacon and the bottom of the beacon has to be above the top of the antennas.

  • @keithgaskins7895
    @keithgaskins7895 2 года назад +1

    I love cell towers i used to draw them alot when i was in school i look at cell towers alot and check them out and i like some of them red and white!!

  • @paullavigne5299
    @paullavigne5299 5 лет назад +5

    Nice work. I wonder if you used waypoints and continue mission features for the fly around that if you did lose communications it would continue mission and then it would rth.

  • @jorgetorres6225
    @jorgetorres6225 3 года назад +8

    Very cool video, I also pilot drones on cell towers for a telecom Carrier. I would be careful and avoid flying in the path of the microwave drum in future missions. The microwave drum is a steady stream output that could cause interference with the UAS, I have experienced this myself.

  • @tomhurley974
    @tomhurley974 5 лет назад +1

    nice job i am going to have to try that

  • @allosMD
    @allosMD 6 лет назад +1

    cool vid!

  • @ericjoppru8040
    @ericjoppru8040 3 года назад +1

    Great video. Where is this tower located, please?

  • @riverrockphotography4843
    @riverrockphotography4843 5 лет назад +1

    Good close up! I just tried this myself.

  • @mollyz2581
    @mollyz2581 5 лет назад

    Where was this?

  • @abdulhameed10515
    @abdulhameed10515 5 лет назад +3

    This tower covers how many kms?

  • @hackerpeti1
    @hackerpeti1 4 года назад +4

    Good work! Why you not have interference from Antennas? All antennas is switched off?

    • @bustergrn
      @bustergrn 3 года назад +4

      Drone uses open WiFi frequency bands. Cellular operates in private bands. While some minor interference could occur simply with the power of the cellular antennas and the drone's proximity to them, it's unlikely to be a major problem.

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад +1

      @@bustergrn Major problem or minor problem? Any ide on how close you can get?

    • @bustergrn
      @bustergrn 3 года назад +1

      @@koolhand12 Hard to say because it would be relative to the site you’re flying and the technology on the site. I would utilize the site’s antenna configuration to understand the width of the beam and stay out of those paths just for safety’s sake. We also utilize zoom cameras so we’re not required to get in close.

    • @celiacastro4566
      @celiacastro4566 2 года назад +1

      @@bustergrn I think u should speak up about the weapons and takking them Down these were used by the world war

  • @TheBryan817
    @TheBryan817 4 года назад +5

    What were they able to determine from this footage? Inventory? Damage? Etc?

    • @robertj3116
      @robertj3116 3 года назад +3

      They do it for the coax routing. Antenna placement and basic size. The wind loading on the towers is determined by the air displacement and heights. So views like this help our engineers get the information for structural integrity.

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад +1

      @@robertj3116 Excellent feedback. How would a pilot locate opportunities to fly missions for a telecom company?

    • @robertj3116
      @robertj3116 3 года назад +3

      @@koolhand12 call or email the larger tower companies. Crown Castle. American Tower. SBA towers etc. ask to be put in touch with the vendors and see if they need a sub contractor. If they are loaded or time pressed who knows.

    • @adamgerald849
      @adamgerald849 2 года назад

      @@robertj3116 a lot of the large tower companies have trained their own techs and assigned them drones to do video audits after any work is done. I know for a fact American Tower CMs do this in WV. It may be easier to find work for contractors doing close out photos because its easier than mobilizing a 2 man crew to climb the tower.

  • @beedslolkuntus2070
    @beedslolkuntus2070 4 года назад +3

    So beautiful

  • @celiacastro4566
    @celiacastro4566 2 года назад

    Why didn’t it fried the drones is it off????

  • @mike-ws4hl
    @mike-ws4hl 5 лет назад +1

    Hey Jordan, great video of the tower. I thought if u got very close to the high voltage power lines or other things that you can lose control of u r drone. I really started with my toy drone so I could get a Birdseye view of things and I could show my grandkids how to fly.

    • @garbanzo_sr
      @garbanzo_sr 5 лет назад +1

      good question

    • @JB007Rules2
      @JB007Rules2 2 года назад

      There aren't high power lines on a radio tower, power comes to the base only. The wires you see are called guy wires (not guide like some may say) and they are there to provide support for the tower and the many thousand pounds that's on the tower.

  • @koolhand12
    @koolhand12 3 года назад +1

    Great work Jordan, was this a paid mission? Were there interference issues?

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  3 года назад

      Not paid. I did not have any signal issues from the tower

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад

      @@JordanMowbray Have you looked into paying gigs?

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  3 года назад

      @@koolhand12 Currently I am too busy filming updates on the dam failures. This is more of a hobby for me.

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад

      @@JordanMowbray What type of filming do you do? I'm asking because I've being funded to start a Media and/or drone business, and seeking data to support receiving the funding. Thanks for responding...

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  3 года назад

      @@koolhand12 I have been covering the dam failures in Michigan. If you look at my most recent videos you can see what ive been filming.

  • @abdulhameed10515
    @abdulhameed10515 5 лет назад +1

    What is the light blinking?

    • @imiceyy3771
      @imiceyy3771 5 лет назад +3

      Abdul Hameed probably to warn airplanes and helicopters to not crash into the tower

    • @johnnyblaze9217
      @johnnyblaze9217 4 года назад +2

      @Christine So Cool wrong its for airplanes and helicopters tf you on about lol I'm a Verizon tower climber. 🙂

    • @robertj3116
      @robertj3116 3 года назад +3

      The lights are installed on any tower above 199 feet and some around airports at 30 feet and above. They warn airplanes that the structure is above the 200 foot mark. Each tower that lit shows up on the airplanes radar as an obstacle and if the lights are off it’s called a notam. Notice to air man. And shows on the radar in that manner to aid the aircraft in safety.

  • @d3ezz
    @d3ezz 2 года назад +1

    Location?

  • @generaldefector
    @generaldefector Год назад

    Point infrared goggles at that and see the damage that's done to our bodies

  • @spencerboaz2385
    @spencerboaz2385 6 лет назад +6

    Never seen anyone do that before . WiFi screws with my mavic bad .

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  6 лет назад +3

      I was surprised that it did not affect it hardly at all especially flying around the back side of it.

    • @ShortiesCleverShorts
      @ShortiesCleverShorts 6 лет назад

      Jordan Mowbray yeah I was thinking about that. Amazing.

    • @jo3boos
      @jo3boos 6 лет назад +1

      Jordan Mowbray what drone were you using for the inspection?

    • @mattcoleman7738
      @mattcoleman7738 3 года назад +3

      The frequencies transmitted from a cell tower are nowhere near those used by WiFi. Tower inspection with drones is a well-established business and there generally aren't interference issues.

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад

      @@JordanMowbray How close did you get? Would the Zoom be a better tool?

  • @aydinmete1991
    @aydinmete1991 5 лет назад +2

    I heard this type of towers would interfere drones signal if getting too close but i see you made great without any signal intervene. Maybe this tower doesn't operating.

    • @JordanMowbray
      @JordanMowbray  5 лет назад +3

      Yes, the tower is active. It depends on the bandwidth of the tower. I am not sure what the bandwidth is on this tower but it did not interfere with my signal, at least within a 1/2 mile of the tower.

    • @fatabbott61
      @fatabbott61 4 года назад +3

      the cell antennas should not affect the drone however the microwave repeater (little round dish might mess with the drone.

    • @bustergrn
      @bustergrn 3 года назад +3

      Bandwidth is, rather obviously, the width of the band and has nothing to do with RF interference. The reason you don't have interference is due to the private frequency band used by the cellular network as opposed to the open, public WiFi band the drone uses. Any interference, as you state, would be in close to the antennas due to RF power elevating the noise floor in the WiFi band within direct line-of-sight between the drone and the controller. The Microwave antenna (large round object, lower than the cellular array, could present some issues.

    • @koolhand12
      @koolhand12 3 года назад

      @@bustergrn Great feedback...How close can you get (per se?)

  • @ShortiesCleverShorts
    @ShortiesCleverShorts 6 лет назад +6

    I heard those things are extremely dangerous! Be careful! Great footage.

    • @robertj3116
      @robertj3116 3 года назад +4

      Been working on them for 20 years. They are safe. 🤓

    • @celiacastro4566
      @celiacastro4566 2 года назад

      @@robertj3116 so but what’s gonna do with ur body I know someone who worked on ur to it was on and he got burn don’t talk crap just because it wasn’t even on

    • @jesu_loves_you_20elmara21
      @jesu_loves_you_20elmara21 Год назад

      He was probably a dumbass not following safety regulations Lmaoo

  • @nicksmith4660
    @nicksmith4660 2 года назад +1

    That installation is garbage! Line management is non existent