OFIL Airborne and Nova Maps Partner on Wildfire Mapping for Utility Helicopters
OFIL Airborne, known for their aerial gimbal systems used in utility inspections, are adding a new capability to their lineup. Their partnership with Nova allows operators to integrate wildfire mapping into their existing equipment.
Helicopter operators can now easily and seamlessly switch between utility inspections and wildfire mapping.
Nova’s current customers include:
- CAL FIRE
- British Columbia Wildfire Service
- LA City Fire Department
The Nova platform has features like in-the-moment heat detection and ready-to-go georeferenced PDFs that ground crews can pull up on their phones. With this new integration, that same toolset is available to helicopter operators using OFIL’s gimbals. This requires no extra crew or complicated software.
Phoenix Heli-Flight, based in Fort McMurray, has been flying the ROMLite gimbal regularly for pipeline and powerline inspections. Now, they’ve successfully deployed it on wildfire missions in Alberta.
“This lets us fly higher, faster, and with more confidence,” said Cameron Spring, operations manager at Phoenix, “The combo of OFIL’s HD and 4K sensors with Nova’s AI mapping tools gives us incredible efficiency in the air.”
Spring continued, “On one recent fire we were capturing over 5000 hectares in a 2.5-hour flight. This huge rate of capture and quick data turnaround is especially useful on the big, fast-moving fires we’re seeing more of.”
Phoenix recently used the system for mapping and hotspot detection on multiple fires in Alberta.
“The system worked flawlessly, allowing us to map larger areas faster and more efficiently. Being helicopter-mounted and NVG-equipped also gives us the capability to work around the clock in jurisdictions doing night attack, and during the same hours that the tankers are flying—when drones would be grounded. Ultimately, this means the agency can clear the area faster, releasing crews for other tasks and saving the taxpayers’ money,” said Spring.
Director of Business Development at Nova Daan Arscott commented, “Nova’s tools have been supporting crews for over a decade but bringing them into manned helicopter operations changes the game.”
“Helicopters can stay in the air longer and reach farther than drones, and when you pair that with automated hotspot detection that can catch something the size of a fist, the result is next level. We’re excited to see Phoenix Heli-Flight working with Nova and OFIL to deliver wildfire intelligence products never before available to fire agencies," Arscott added.
The OFIL highlighted the practicality involved in their approach.
“We didn’t try to reinvent the wheel,” said Ray Hyland, director of Airborne Solutions, “Nova is already widely trusted in the wildfire industry, so our goal was to make it plug-and-play.”
Hyland continued, “The result is something you can be using on power lines in the morning, get a call, and by lunchtime you’re mapping fires, without needing a GIS team onboard. Operators love that it’s easy to use and keeps their aircraft on the scene longer—especially after the main fire’s been knocked down and everyone else goes home.”