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Mountain Drones' prototype can carry a 17-pound payload.    Illustration by Tavis Coburn
Mountain Drones' prototype can carry a 17-pound payload. Illustration by Tavis Coburn

The Newest Tool in Avy Control: Bomb-Carrying Drones

That high-pitched whine you鈥檙e about to hear at your favorite ski hill? It鈥檚 the sound of UAVs dropping avy charges.

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In 2010, Jackson Hole ski patroller Mark 鈥淏ig Wally鈥 Wolling was using hand charges to set off controlled avalanches when the slope above him broke free. He was carried over a cliff, buried, and died three days later.聽

Though it鈥檚 rare for the job to be fatal鈥攕ince 2009, one ski patroller has died each year in the United States鈥攊t鈥檚 not uncommon for avalanche-control personnel to be in some precarious situations. Paul Baugher, head of the ski patrol at Crystal Mountain聽in Washington, has been buried three times. 鈥淲e do mitigation work with explosives, which have inherent danger, and we do it in bad weather,鈥 says Baugher. 鈥淚f you can reduce someone鈥檚 exposure to dangerous snow conditions, that鈥檚 huge.鈥澛

In December 2013, ski buddies Brent Holbrook, Warren Linde, Gray Byers, and Robert Blank launched , based in Telluride, Colorado, to do just that. How? Take the bombs out of the patrollers鈥 hands, strap them to an octocopter, and let the unmanned craft do the job instead.聽

After their friend was killed in an avalanche in the East Vail Chutes, the group wondered if there was anything they could have done to help. Their answer? Just maybe.

Mountain Drones was one of five early聽stage startups selected by the to spend February through July 2015 receiving mentorship and seed funding, which was enough for the team to create their initial drone prototypes.聽

鈥淲e鈥檝e got the biggest,聽baddest聽drone there is.鈥

The company performed some test flights last season and will expand to other Colorado resorts鈥攗sing dummy explosives鈥攖his winter. Patrollers say it could be a vital tool. 鈥淲e鈥檝e talked with half a dozen ski patrols that are very interested,鈥 says Holbrook. The only other hurdle is FAA approval, which could take a while鈥攖he agency can鈥檛 even figure out how to regulate drones without explosives strapped to them.

鈥淲e鈥檝e demonstrated our basic prototypes to Telluride Ski Patrol,鈥 says Holbrook. 鈥淥ur testing went just as planned. The technology is ready, and we鈥檙e capable of performing avalanche mitigation using drones. It鈥檚 just a matter of waiting for the regulations to catch up.鈥

Current FAA regulations for unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) prohibit things like flying over crowds, and the devices are not permitted to drop anything while in flight (read: no dynamite).

Drones equipped with explosives are controversial even in military applications, and there are obvious security concerns when you talk about flying them around ski resorts. Holbrook estimates it will take at least one or two years before the FAA鈥檚 unmanned aircraft regulations permit Mountain Drones to fly its drone with actual dynamite. (The team has already used mock dynamite at Telluride.)聽

While the explosives are fake for now, the drone is ready to go. The Mountain Drones team鈥檚 latest prototype, the 35-pound Prospect, uses components from ten聽different drone manufacturers. 鈥淲e have the best propellers from one, the best motors from another, and the best frame from a third,鈥 says Holbrook. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got the biggest, baddest drone there is.鈥澛

The Prospect has eight 30-inch-long propellers and a seven-foot wingspan. It flies for 45 minutes on one battery and can carry half its weight in dynamite,聽enough to clear five avalanche paths in one flight.

Here鈥檚 how it would work: Instead of spending hours bootpacking to a ridgeline to drop a hand charge, ski patrollers would select a preprogrammed route for the drone to fly and manually drop the charges to clear the slope from a safe distance. Onboard sensors will calculate the snow-water equivalent鈥攁 measure of the snowpack鈥檚 water content鈥攁nd depth, allowing patrollers to identify persistent weak layers and breaking points and helping them determine where to make drops.聽

Typical drones perform badly in inclement weather and at high altitude. Mountain Drones fixes that issue with built-in LED lights for visibility in whiteout conditions and a proprietary climate-controlled, waterproof housing for the electronics. 鈥淚f anything can fly up there, we can,鈥 says Holbrook.聽

Mountain Drones is also working on sensors for other high-altitude pursuits, like GIS mapping and environmental monitoring. The team is聽visiting mountains in other countries, hoping to demonstrate the capability of their technology in order to prove their abilities to authorities in the United States.

For now, their dreams of dynamite-strapped drones putting ski patrollers out of harm鈥檚 way is on hold until federal regulations allow them to fly. And even though it鈥檚 technically illegal, that doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 not a good idea.

鈥淭wenty years from now, we might be saying, 鈥楻emember when they used to let us go out into avalanche paths?鈥欌澛爏ays Baugher.

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