CPPC UAV

CPPC UAV is a Chinese UAV developed by China Petroleum Pipeline College (CPPC, 中国石油管道学院) of CNPC : China National Petroleum Corporation], also known as Hebei Technical College of Petroleum Profession (河北石油职业技术学院). CPPC UAV is specially designed for aerial patrol, surveillance, and survey missions for petroleum pipelines, and has already entered service.

CPPC UAV
Role UAV
National origin China
Manufacturer China Petroleum Pipeline College (CPPC)
Designer CPPC / Hebei Technical College of Petroleum Profession
First flight 2011 or 2012
Introduction 2013
Status In service
Primary user China

CPPC UAV program rooted from the need to improve the maintenance, patrol, surveillance, and survey tasks performed manually for petroleum pipelines due to the high cost, slow response, high cost due to the man-hour needed, as well as other problems of performing these missions manually. UAV is a good answer to reduce if not completely resolve these problems, and CPPC was tasked to develop an UAV specifically tailored to the need of petroleum industry. Program begun in 2011, and was successfully completed in 2013, earning sixteen patents. The program manager is Mr. Liu Yan-ru (刘彦儒), the department chairman of electrical engineering of CPPC. CPPC UAV is a fixed-wing UAV in conventional layout with high-wing configuration and a pair of skids as landing gear. Propulsion is provided by a two-blade propeller driven by a tractor engine mounted in the nose.[1] Plans have been to further develop the UAV into a family to meet different demands. Although initially designed for missions for petroleum pipeline, the UAV can also be adopted for natural gas pipeline as well. The unit cost of a complete system including the UAV itself, ground control station and other prepherial equipment is around ¥ 500,000.[2]

See also

List of unmanned aerial vehicles of the People's Republic of China

References

  1. CPPC UAV
  2. "CPPC unmanned aerial vehicle". Archived from the original on 2013-12-05. Retrieved 2013-12-02.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.