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Ukraine’s New Kamikaze Jet Drone Makes First Flight

Maxim Glushak announced on his Facebook page that a new kamikaze jet drone made its first flight in Ukraine. The photos reveal an unmanned aerial vehicle developed in a canard configuration with a horizontal front tail. The presence of air intakes makes it possible to claim that a non-rocket engine is installed on the UAV. In addition, […]

SkyDefense Counter-UAS Weapon System

SkyDefense LLC of Brighton, Colorado has announced its counter-UAS interceptor weapon system which can neutralize a swarm of hostile drones. The SkyDefense C2 command-and-control ‘‘VRAM,” short for “Visual Realtime Airspace Monitoring” integrates a counter-UAS interceptor weapon with a rugged four-wheel drive EV which can launch and communicate remotely with one or more (6.5 ft. long […]

SkyDome Hosts Successful Tests by LiquidPiston

SkyDome, Oneida County’s cutting-edge indoor Uncrewed Aerial Systems (UAS) test facility, started the New Year with a resounding success by welcoming LiquidPiston for a series of tests of its modified VTOL airframe. LiquidPiston, based in Bloomfield, CT, designs and develops groundbreaking compact, powerful, and quiet multi-fuel rotary engines and hybrid electric power systems. Under a […]

Is Drone Mapping a First Amendment Right? This NC Lawsuit Has Major Implications for the Commercial Drone Industry

Is Drone Mapping the Same as Surveying, Which Requires a License and Board Certification? Institute for Justice Advocates for First Amendment Rights in North Carolina Drone Case In a recent development that could have far-reaching implications for commercial drone businesses, the non-profit Institute for Justice (IJ) presented oral arguments in a First Amendment case in […]

The post Is Drone Mapping a First Amendment Right? This NC Lawsuit Has Major Implications for the Commercial Drone Industry appeared first on DRONELIFE.

Revolutionizing Nuclear Decommissioning: TEPCO’s Innovative Use of Drones in Fukushima Cleanup

Unmanned Aerial Technology: Fukushima Drone Survey a Game-Changer in Assessing Damage and Accelerating Cleanup at Nuclear Disaster Site 13 years ago, one of the worst nuclear disasters in history occurred when a record-breaking earthquake and following tsunami resulted in flooding – and subsequent nuclear meltdown – at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. […]

The post Revolutionizing Nuclear Decommissioning: TEPCO’s Innovative Use of Drones in Fukushima Cleanup appeared first on DRONELIFE.

Disney Electrical Sky Parade is best theme park drone show yet — watch it here

Disney’s Main Street Electrical Parade has been a theme park classic ever since it launched at the original Disneyland theme park in California in 1972. It’s had on and off runs, with regular updates to make the 70s parade relevant to a modern audience. And this latest update, the Disney Electrical Sky Parade, is clear proof that even a parade made in the 1970s can still be cutting edge.

Disneyland Paris this month created its own version of Disney’s Main Street Electrical Parade. This one isn’t a parade with floats rolling through the streets though. No, this one is a drone light show. It takes the iconic soundtrack of electro-syntho-magnetic music, remixes it and sets drones to fly in sync with it. The drones take the shapes of some of the original parade’s most iconic floats, including a train and Elliott from the 1977 film “Pete’s Dragon.”

The whole drone show is augmented with projections on the theme park’s centerpiece, “Sleeping Beauty Castle.” It runs about 10 minutes, but you don’t have to travel all the way to France to watch it. Check out the YouTube version of the Electrical Sky Parade below:

How to watch the Disney Electrical Sky Parade

The Disney Electrical Sky Parade debuted on Jan. 8 2024. Though it’s an incredible show, it’s actually a pre-show of sorts, occurring right before the theme park’s nighttime spectacular called Disney Dreams.

The show will run nightly through Sept. 30, 2024 (though there are a few date exceptions, and the show is subject to cancellation for severe weather). As far as the best viewing spot, head in front of the castle. Dronisos recommends viewing its shows from about 300 meters (just under 1,000 feet) away. Though, if it’s a clear night with calm weather, drone light shows have been spotted more than a kilometer (over a half-mile) away.

Come October, Disney will turn over to seasonal entertainment, ending its run to make way for Disney Halloween Festival and later Disney Enchanted Christmas, both of which feature their own parades and nighttime spectaculars.

Disneyland Paris Disney Electrical Sky Parade
Concept art courtesy of Disney

How Disney Electrical Sky Parade was made

The drone show is a collaboration between the Disneyland Paris Entertainment teams and Dronisos, which is a company that puts on drone shows around the world.

As far as the drones themselves, those are also French. Dronisos has a partnership with French drone maker Parrot (they’re most recognizable with their now-defunct Bebop drone). The partnership allows Dronisos to build upon Parrot’s drone platform to specifically develop performance drone systems for entertainment.

Though these are hardly recognizable as Parrot drones. And though there’s a growing list of companies that make light show drones, it wouldn’t be fair to call Parrot one of them. That’s because Dronisos says it heavily modifies the hardware and software of these drones to make them work for drone light shows.

Dronisos actually bought the licence from Parrot to take the company’s Mambo, Bebop 2 and Anafi 1 drones and remake them. Dronisos has taken the Mambo (which was initially marketed as a toy drone) and renamed it “Helios” as an indoor-only light show drone. The Parrot Bebop 2 has been reworked with a light into the Zephyr drone, and the Anafi is renamed as the Autan. Both the Autan and Zephyr can be used indoors or outdoors, and all three light show drones are built in France.

Image courtesy of Dronisos.
Graphic courtesy of Dronisos

Dronisos has become the ‘official technology supplier of Disneyland Paris’ and is also the team that powered previous Disneyland Paris drone shows including Disney D-Light and Avengers: Power the Night.

Dronisos has also worked with other theme parks, including the Dollywood Summer 2023 drone show.

And as far as how much the Electrical Sky Parade drone light show costs? Disney won’t disclose it. But for context, Texas-based Verge Aero says its drone shows usually cost between $50,000 to $200,000 for a customized, outdoor drone light show. Luckily, Disney gets the benefit of repeatable, so it’s likely the costs are far, far lower. No matter the mechanism, light shows are hardly cheap in any form. Disney spends an estimated $33,000 per show for its fireworks spectacular at its Magic Kingdom theme park in Orlando, Fla.

The post Disney Electrical Sky Parade is best theme park drone show yet — watch it here appeared first on The Drone Girl.

Iranian Army Receives Giant Fleet of New Drones

The Islamic Republic of Iran Army has received large numbers of strategic combat, reconnaissance, destruction and radar drones. The delivery of the homegrown unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) took place during a ceremony on Tuesday in the presence of Chief Commander of the Army Major General Abdolrahim Mousavi and Defense Minister Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Ashtiani. […]