I was puttering in my raised garden beds when a shriek from The Missus pierced the air. This was followed by urgent commands to the dog.
The cause of the ruckus was this...
There was the Mother of all unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) westbound, coming straight for our driveway only to stop at the property line, pirouette and head eastward all the while spraying the neighbor's field. The drift smelled of fertilizer; nevertheless, since the dog decided to chase-down the alien contraption when we finally collected her she got a bath.
I recently took delivery of a UAV of my own; a DJI Neo, a small drone that I could use for photography and scouting that doesn't require a pilot license. The very same company manufactures a heavy-lift agricultural model in the Agras lineup - the DJI Agras T40 and successor DJI Agras T50. They're difficult to tell apart from one another but they're considered the gold standard of drones designed specifically for precision farming.
The basic design includes a four-arm layout featuring coaxial twin rotors - notably two sets of propellers per arm totally eight blades. Brushless motors drive the 54-inch carbon fiber props. There is landing gear and a tank set-up that can be swapped-out in minutes for both spreading dry product (fertilizer, lime and seed) or liquids (fertilizer, herbicide or insecticide).
You'll note from the videos that there are no traditional high pressure nozzles. Instead the drone utilizes spinning discs that atomize the liquid to an adjustable mist producing droplets ranging from 50 to 500 microns in size. Impeller pumps deliver a flow rate of 16 to 24 liters per minute and an application swath can range from 22 to 36 feet depending-upon altitude. Tipping the scales at a paltry 4.8 ounces (including battery) my miniature DJI Neo pales when compared to its farming cousin. The AG version boasts a takeoff weight (aircraft, battery and payload) of up to 227 pounds and can fly at 15-20 mph.
Avionics include a phased array radar, binocular vision and real time kinetic positioning guided by Global Navigational Satellite System (GNSS) ensuring no overlapping or missed crop rows. There is a camera for piloting by First Person View; however, once a field has been flown for mapping purposes control is handed-off to an autonomous system for flight. The T40 and T50 drones can spray 50-52 acres in less than an hour of flight time without breaking a sweat. Power is supplied by a 26 pound battery than can be charged from empty to 100% in 9-12 minutes allowing a two-battery rotation to run continuously all day long.
As a consequence of being well over the weight threshold for a hobbyist like me, operation requires a specialized FAA Part 137 agricultural pilot certificate and a Class 2 medical certificate. Just like barnstorming an old school crop duster; only the pilot never leaves the ground.
Unfolded, and configured for flight, the aircraft measures roughly 9 by 10 feet from blade tip to blade tip; or about the size of a compact car. Watching one of these in flight, up close and personal, is indeed impressive.
Starting price for a T50 heavy-lift, LIDAR-equipped quadcopter is $29,646.
Think of the possibilities....




