top of page

DRONE

Drone
Drone Website Strip.jpg

UAV OPERATOR

Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are proving to be incredibly versatile for many applications, due to their ability to easily gain an aerial perspective and access those hard-to-reach areas. I'm a UK registered drone operator with an ultra-HD 4K drone, with experience operating UAVs for general imagery collection, to collect imagery for surveys and inspections, and to collect imagery for scientific research. Please get in touch for a professional low-cost service.

Please feel free to contact me at oskar.brennan@outlook.com to discuss how you could benefit from UAV imagery.

CREATIVE

The unique ability of UAVs to easily image from the air makes them a must-have for any photo or video project, particularly those intending to convey the wider setting.

Flooding18.jpg

SURVEY

UAVs can provide otherwise impossible angles for inspection of features large and small, to gain vital understanding of issues that may not at first be obvious or visible.

Gutter Survey.jpg

RESEARCH

The scope for the application of UAVs in scientific research is immense, and even simple visual sensors can allow for rapid, detailed and accurate data collection.

Tewkesbury Malverns Snow showers.jpg

CREATIVE

Craigypistyll.jpg
Drone creative
Drone Website Strip2.jpg

SURVEY

GUTTER AND ROOF

LARGER INFRASTRUCTURE

Drone overtopping# Embankment.jpg

UAVs are brilliant for safely, efficiently and accurately surveying hard to access infrastructure to identify issues and provide vital insights, which can help to inform remedial works or target more detailed analysis.  Pictured here are examples of how UAVs could be used for inspection, like for example gutter inspections, which can be difficult and high-risk to perform manually. Also pictured is how drone imagery could be used to identify low points on a flood embankment, which may not be possible to identify manually due to the dangers of flood water.

Drone inspection
Drone Website Strip4.jpg

RESEARCH

UAVs are incredibly valuable tools for research, whether that is for collecting imagery to inform decisions on more precise research techniques or using the imagery itself as data to perform analyses on.

​

These images show how over 800 overlapping aerial images were combined to produce a 3D model of a study site, which could then be used to perform analyses like finding the topographic wetness index, seen here in the orange and purple colours.

​

The software to turn aerial imagery into a DEM and Orthomosaic may be licensable through your academic institution, but unfortunately I can only collect and provide the raw imagery.

Drone Research
bottom of page