Rail (UK)

Drone technology helps NR monitoring

- Paul Stephen paul.stephen@bauermedia.co.uk Assistant Features Editor

NETWORK Rail has hailed a drone-borne railway infrastruc­ture measuremen­t and monitoring system from Plowman Craven as a “game-changer”, due to its potential to increase the safety and cost-effectiven­ess of track maintenanc­e.

NR’s endorsemen­t of the Hertfordsh­ire company’s Vogel R3D technology follows a successful trial of the product at sidings near Stoke in February, that it partfunded.

Vogel R3D comprises a 100 mega-pixel camera and laser scanner, flown by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) at a height of 25 metres above track level and at a speed of between 1-2 metres per second. The high-resolution images are then pieced together using computer software and converted to Point Cloud data to produce 3D and virtual reality models for the end user, plus topographi­cal surveys and track alignment data.

Unlike train-borne devices or manual inspection, Vogel 3DM does not require as much physical access to the network or any possession­s, apart from when placing visual markers adjacent to the track that act as control points for interpreti­ng the data.

By avoiding the need for ‘boots on the ground’ or for closing the railway, the attractive­ness of using UAV technology is obvious to NR - it must compensate operators during possession­s, and bear the risk to contractor­s and the associated costs of providing safety-critical staff.

Chris Preston, a senior engineer at NR said: “The applicatio­n of the Vogel R3D is a real game-changer for Network Rail, and helps us to satisfy many of our survey requiremen­ts in a safe manner without the cost implicatio­ns or potential programme delays associated with multiple possession­s.”

Plowman Craven told RAIL that

having been presented to NR’s track technology board, Vogel R3D fully satisfies NR’s photo-geometry techniques and standards for use on the network. The company now expects to be included in a framework agreement that NR already has with four other companies that use UAVs to provide aerial inspection­s and surveys, when it is renewed at the end of the year.

“We believed we could develop something where we wouldn’t need to shut the railway,” said Malcolm Donald, director at Plowman Craven.

“The holy grail to NR is that no one is on the track, so there’s no possession, which can be expensive to NR and in busy areas quite hard to get. The savings come from less possession planning, safety personnel, and (Schedule 8) payments to operators, and of course reputation­al benefits for improved safety.

“But we’re not just a company using a UAV to take pictures, it’s a tool to get high accuracy data. This product delivers track alignment data to an accuracy of 2mm, which no one else is doing.”

 ?? PLOWMAN CRAVEN. ?? Unlike traditiona­l methods of track inspection, Plowman Craven’s Vogel R3D system does not require track possession­s to gather data. It is limited only by bad weather, its use during daylight hours, and inability to go into tunnels.
PLOWMAN CRAVEN. Unlike traditiona­l methods of track inspection, Plowman Craven’s Vogel R3D system does not require track possession­s to gather data. It is limited only by bad weather, its use during daylight hours, and inability to go into tunnels.
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