Saturday, May 6, 2017

Drones with Cameras



Dubbed Drones with Cameras, the waterproof device can find, attract and record fish. It operates at a depth of 30 meters, or about 98 feet, for up to four hours at a time. It is suitable for use in fresh-, salt-or chlorinated-water. The PowerRay garnered buzz when PowerVision Technology Group first announced it at CES in January 2017. Of course it was a crowd pleaser among technophiles. But it remains to be seen how outdoor and marine biology enthusiasts may embrace or reject this technology.

 The basic package, the PowerRay Explorer, has a 50 meter cable that tethers the device back to a base station above water. Besides keeping the drone from getting lost in a strong current, the cable transmits power to and video from the PowerRay back to the base station. All PowerRays have a 4K camera on board. ZEISS provides optical components to PowerVision.

 The mid-level package, the PowerRay Angler, gives fishermen a way to cheat, homing in on prey underwater with the company’s “Powerseeker Fishfinder,” shining lights and dropping bait to attract them using a remotely operated “Bait Drop Line.”

 The PowerRay Wizard edition includes a VR headset that lets users watch what they’re recording in a kind of immersive open water exploration that doesn’t require a wetsuit. The PowerRays cost from $1,488 to $1,888 in the US, and €1,599 to €2,099 in European markets. PowerRay faces competition in the US market from makers of other underwater drones and waterproof cameras, most notably the deeper-diving Trident made by startup OpenROV. PowerRay footage captured underwater at the Aquarium of the Bay in San Francisco. PowerVision’s US CEO, Chih-Che Tsai, told TechCrunch, he does not view PowerRay’s features as “cheats” for fishermen. He said, “Fish finders are nothing new.


You have sonar systems that help you identify the landscape and where the fish are, already. Instead of putting it on the boat, we are just letting you move it around to go out and find the fish.” We met up with the CEO for a PowerRay launch party at the San Francisco Aqu

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