Drone News Update podcast

Drone News: Drone Finds Missing Man, XPrize Competition, Unofficial World Record, FAA Waiver Process

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Welcome to your weekly UAS News Update. We have four stories for you this week: a DJI drone finds a missing man in Kentucky after 29 hours, the XPrize competition that's using drones to autonomously fight wildfires, a new unofficial world record for the longest endurance multi rotor drone, and the FAA changes process to submit waivers. Let's get to it!
First up this week, a drones-for-good story out of Kentucky. On December 20th in LaGrange, a local man went missing after failing to return from his routine afternoon walk. As temperatures dropped and daylight faded, the Oldham County search and rescue team was called in. The search area included not just neighborhoods but also large, dense forests that were completely unreachable on foot or even by ATV.The county’s aerial response team deployed a mobile command post and launched several drones, including a DJI Matrice 4T. After hours of searching, the assistant chief pilot, Justin Hilliard, spotted a faint heat signature on his thermal feed. He said it didn't look like a person at first, more like a plastic garbage bag filled with water. But something told him to check it out. A team member was sent to the location on foot, and moments later, they confirmed it was the missing man. He was alive after 29 hours in the bitter cold but was unable to walk. Thanks to the drone, this was a rescue. Next up, we're looking at how drones are being used to fight wildfires before they even get started. The XPrize Wildfire competition is pushing the boundaries of autonomous technology with a massive challenge: to find and extinguish a wildfire inside a 1,000-square-kilometer area, all in under ten minutes. One team, called Crossfire, is using a two-drone system. The "eyes" of the operation is an off-the-shelf DJI drone equipped with thermal and optical cameras. Its video feed runs through a deep learning model trained on thousands of fire images, allowing it to spot a real fire and ignore false positives. Once a fire is confirmed, the "action" drone is deployed. This is a Freefly Alta X, a heavy-lift platform normally used for cinema cameras. It's tasked with carrying a water-filled balloon and dropping it with incredible precision just meters above the flames to extinguish the fire at its source.While a drone can't carry as much water as a helicopter, the precision is the key. Traditional aircraft drop water from high altitudes, where a lot of it gets scattered by the wind. This method puts the water exactly where it needs to be, wasting less and stopping a small fire faster. Of course, regulations around autonomous flight and payload drops are still a major hurdle. But this competition is important because it funds the research and lets engineers break things so that firefighters don't have to. I want to pause for just a minute to discuss an upcoming webinar we’ll be hosting. This webinar is all about how to land clients in 7 days. It’ll run for one hour, and you will need to preregister if you want to attend. Check out the link below and we hope to see you there! Next story comes from our friend Alex Suarez. He’s created a multi rotor drone that flies for 4 hours. Yes, you heard that right, a 4 hour flight time. And this isn’t a small aircraft either, it’s a large hexacopter spinning some huge propellers. Currently, we’re not sure what flight controller, batteries, or props were used, but this is an extremely impressive achievement, especially when you consider that this was 4 hours of hover time, not forward flight time. Alex is in the process of attempting a Guinness world record, and we’ll keep you updated when we hear more! For now, awesome job Alex! We’ll see you on Post Flight, our Premium community show where we share our uncensored opinions that aren’t always suitable for YouTube! Have a great weekend!https://dronexl.co/2025/12/26/drones-wildfires-explode/https://dronexl.co/2025/12/26/drone-missing-man-29-hours-cold/

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