Épisodes

  • Red Raven UAS Weekly Briefing: DJI Isn't Slowing Down — And Neither Is the Race to Replace It (April 17, 2026)
    Apr 17 2026

    Every layer of the drone industry moved this week — and if you're operating, training, or building in this space, you need to understand why.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • DJI's April release and the closing window for US availability — which products can reach American buyers and why
    • Hyfix's $15M chip manufacturing round and the May 1 FCC "Drone Dominance" comment deadline
    • AeroVironment's MAYHEM 10 and the Air Force's $270M solar-drone contract built on Ukraine combat data
    • Counter-drone spending explosion: $29B in Q1 alone, border lasers, rifle ammunition, and Marine deployments
    • Amazon's 30M customer delivery target and DoorDash's Atlanta launch — and what community friction means for all operators
    • Record Part 107 test attempts and what declining pass rates signal about the workforce pipeline

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    • FAA Part 107 Course (current special pricing): redravenuas.com/part107
    • Weekly Briefing full post: redravenuas.com/blog/weekly-briefing-2026-04-17
    • Red Raven Consulting & Program Development: redravenuas.com/services

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    15 min
  • Why People Fail the FAA Part 107 Exam — And What to Do Before Your Retake
    Apr 16 2026

    You walked out of the testing center. The screen said FAIL. Now you're calculating how much the retake costs and how long you have to wait.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why the official 92% pass rate is misleading — and what it hides about self-studiers
    • What the Part 107 exam actually tests (hint: zero questions about flying a drone)
    • The #1 cause of exam failures: sectional chart interpretation — what sectional charts are and why they trip everyone up
    • The "free resources" trap that turns a $99 problem into a $350 problem
    • How to read your score report and use it to build your retake study plan
    • The 85% benchmark: why you should never reschedule until you hit this on practice exams
    • What our pass guarantee actually covers — and how it works

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    • Free 12-Question Part 107 Practice Test: redravenuas.com/part107-practice-test
    • FAA Part 107 Course (pass guarantee): redravenuas.com/part107
    • Full Written Guide: redravenuas.com/blog/failed-part-107-exam

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    21 min
  • Nobody Is Replacing DJI, the Mavic 2 Era Ends, and Amazon's Drone Delivery Reality Check — UAS Weekly Briefing April 10, 2026
    Apr 10 2026

    The platforms that defined professional drone operations are being retired. No domestic manufacturer is ready to fill the gap DJI is leaving. And this week, real-world deployments — from a Texas suburb pushing back on delivery drones to an Oregon sheriff's office making a hit-and-run arrest from the air — showed exactly where the industry stands.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why no domestic manufacturer is ready to replace DJI at scale — and what the January 2027 deadline means for operators running foreign hardware
    • The end of the Mavic 2 Pro and Enterprise era — the platforms that changed how public safety, cinematography, and enterprise operations use drones, and what the retirement timeline means for agencies still flying them
    • Amazon Prime Air's adjustment in Richardson, TX — why community pushback, a building strike, and a close city council vote have forced operational changes, and what every drone delivery program should learn from it
    • FAA Drone Safety Day on April 25 — why the scale of this year's campaign signals something real about how crowded the airspace is getting
    • Washington County, Oregon's DFR program making a hit-and-run arrest in six weeks of operation — the clearest real-world case for Drone as First Responder programs yet
    • A critical security flaw in PX4 drone software — what it affects and whether your platform is at risk

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    Red Raven UAS Drone Program Consulting: http://www.redravenuas.com/consulting
    FAA Part 107 Course (current special pricing): http://www.redravenuas.com/part107
    On-Site Training: http://www.redravenuas.com/training
    FAA Drone Safety Day 2026 Events: ncatech.org/faa_events/
    Drone as First Responder Guide: http://www.redravenuas.com/blog/drone-first-responder-dfr
    How to Build a Public Safety Drone Program: http://www.redravenuas.com/blog/build-public-safety-drone-program

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    15 min
  • Weekly Drone Briefing: FCC Drone Dominance, Nuclear Base Swarms & the Future of Autonomous Aviation
    Apr 5 2026

    The drone era isn't coming — it arrived this week. The U.S. government declared drone dominance a national priority. Sophisticated swarms penetrated a nuclear base for a week. And traditional aerospace giants are betting everything on autonomous systems.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why the FCC's "drone dominance" proceeding matters for every operator
    • The Barksdale Air Force Base drone incursions — what happened and why it matters
    • Manna's $50M raise and what it signals about drone delivery careers
    • Sikorsky and Robinson's autonomous cargo helicopter
    • Terra Drone's investment in Ukrainian interceptor technology
    • DJI's free 3D viewer and the "last mile" problem of drone data

    Resources mentioned:
    Red Raven UAS Services: redravenuas.com/services
    FAA Part 107 Course: redravenuas.com/part107
    Weekly Briefing: redravenuas.com/blog/weekly-briefing-2026-04-03

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    19 min
  • What It Actually Costs to Start a Drone Program (2026)
    Apr 1 2026

    Your agency just approved a $3,000 drone purchase. It arrives Tuesday. By Wednesday, it's sitting in a supply closet — because nobody is FAA-certified to fly it, nobody wrote the policies, and nobody planned for anything beyond unboxing day. Sound familiar?

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why a drone purchase and a drone program are two completely different things
    • The five major cost categories every program needs to budget for — and the real dollar ranges
    • The hidden costs that show up in almost zero budgets (staff time, legal review, replacement planning)
    • Why "starting cheap" with a consumer drone almost always costs more in the long run
    • Real first-year budget ranges: $5K–$15K (starter), $20K–$60K (public safety), $75K–$150K+ (enterprise)
    • A six-step framework for budgeting backwards from your mission instead of starting with hardware
    • Eight questions every organization needs to answer before spending a dollar on drone equipment
    • Why platform selection should be the last decision you make, not the first

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    • Red Raven UAS On-Site Training: redravenuas.com/training
    • FAA Part 107 Course (current special pricing): redravenuas.com/part107
    • Consulting & Program Development: redravenuas.com/consulting
    • What It Actually Costs to Build a Drone Program: redravenuas.com/blog/build-public-safety-drone-program

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    24 min
  • Why Utility UAS Programs Fail — And How to Build One That Works
    Mar 25 2026

    Your utility bought the drones. Your pilots passed their Part 107 exams. Management signed off on the budget. And then six months later, the inspection data is sitting on a hard drive that nobody's opened, the maintenance team doesn't trust the imagery, and leadership is asking where the ROI went.

    This is one of the most common patterns we see in utility drone programs: organizations that invest in the right equipment and still don't get the results they were expecting. The gap isn't the technology. It's how the program was built.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why the business case for utility drones became undeniable in 2025 — and what the real numbers look like when you compare helicopter crews to drone teams
    • The five core inspection use cases: transmission lines, substations, solar farms, wind turbines, and pipeline corridors — and which ones to start with
    • The build vs. buy decision — when to invest in an internal team vs. contracting out, and why most large utilities end up doing both
    • Why Part 107 certification is the legal floor, not the operational ceiling — and what mission-specific training actually looks like for utility inspection pilots
    • Data management: the #1 place utility drone programs underperform — and the five-component workflow that separates programs that demonstrate ROI from programs that collect dust
    • The regulatory landscape: Part 107, LAANC, NERC CIP compliance, and how Part 108 BVLOS rules will transform pipeline and corridor inspection
    • How to build the ROI case that gets leadership buy-in — and the phased approach that actually produces sustainable results

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    Red Raven UAS Consulting & Program Development: redravenuas.com/consulting Red Raven On-Site Training: redravenuas.com/training
    FAA Part 107 Course (current special pricing): redravenuas.com/part107
    Red Raven UAS Blog: redravenuas.com/blog

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    25 min
  • Drone Training for Fire Departments: What Part 107 Doesn't Teach You on the Fireground
    Mar 18 2026

    Your fire department finally got the budget. The drone is state of the art. Your pilots passed their Part 107 exams. Leadership put out a press release. And then, at 2 AM, the first real structure fire call drops — and things quietly fall apart.

    The pilot freezes on the thermal read. The incident commander waves it off. The footage is useless. And nobody really knows what went wrong.

    This is one of the most common — and most dangerous — patterns in fire department drone programs today: mistaking legal compliance for operational readiness on the fireground.


    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why the FAA Part 107 certificate is the floor — not the ceiling — of drone readiness
    • What actually happens to a pilot's physiology under the stress of a live fire scene (adrenaline, cortisol, tunnel vision, loss of fine motor control)
    • The thermal camera traps that can cost a crew their lives — emissivity, void space masking, and palette miscalibration
    • Night operations: the sensory deprivation chamber that Part 107 doesn't prepare you for
    • Equipment failures in hostile environments: RF interference, GPS degradation, and voltage sag (how a drone can try to land itself into the flames)
    • Crew Resource Management (CRM) — why the pilot is an intelligence node, not just a remote control operator
    • How Red Raven's scenario-based training methodology — built by 35-year LAFD veteran Derek Ward — bridges the gap between certified and mission-ready

    We close with a thought-provoking question for the future of public safety UAS: If human panic is the biggest risk in life-or-death missions, should we eventually hand the controls to autonomous AI? And does a machine have the intuition to recognize a faint thermal shadow as a trapped child rather than furniture?


    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    • Red Raven UAS On-Site Training: redravenuas.com/training
    • FAA Part 107 Course (current special pricing): redravenuas.com/part107
    • Consulting & Program Development: redravenuas.com/consulting

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    18 min
  • Conquering Airspace: Part 107 Airspace Explained (Without the Confusion)
    Mar 3 2026

    Airspace is the “final boss” of the FAA Part 107 exam — not because it’s impossible, but because most people try to memorize it instead of understanding the system.

    In this episode, we break airspace down into a simple, repeatable framework: controlled vs. uncontrolled (permission vs. no permission). We walk through the airspace classes you actually need for Part 107, show how LAANC makes authorization simple, and explain how to read sectional charts faster by focusing on what the colors and line types are really telling you.

    IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

    • The one question that solves airspace: controlled vs. uncontrolled (permission required vs. not required)
    • How LAANC works in plain English — and when it’s the “easy button” for controlled airspace
    • How to group the airspace alphabet so it’s not random: ignore Class A, understand B/C/D, and know G vs. E
    • Why Class E is the “shapeshifter” — and how to figure out where it starts (surface vs. 700/1200’)
    • The fastest way to read charts for Part 107: blue vs. magenta and what each usually implies
    • The test-day “cheat code”: using the Airmen Knowledge Testing Supplement legend to decode symbols
    • Why the FAA cares so much: low-level helicopters, medevac flights, and high-speed military routes

    For UAS consulting, on-site training, and FAA Part 107 certification, visit redravenuas.com

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    18 min