- National Grid and the University of Manchester collaborate on a £1.1 million grid project.
- The project is expected to save an estimated £2.8 million over 15 years.
National Grid and the University of Manchester are collaborating on a £1.1 million project to develop a new system that can inspect overhead transmission line insulators in real time using electric field sensor technology.
The technology will be drone-mountable, allowing for live monitoring of the condition of high-voltage insulators without requiring traditional ground patrols, circuit outages, or lineworkers scaling pylons.
Insulators produce electric fields that can reveal their health, and a purpose-built electric field sensor system can analyse their e-field profiles and assess their condition.
Manchester’s High Voltage Laboratory will be used to test and develop the technology.
The project is expected to save an estimated £2.8 million over 15 years through cost and resource efficiencies in transmission network monitoring.
National Grid is also trialling autonomous drones to monitor pylons and overhead lines visually.
Nicola Todd, head of strategy and innovation and National Grid Electricity Transmission, said: “We’re increasingly using drones as part of our activities monitoring the condition of our transmission network, and innovations like this e-field sensing system mean there are even more exciting ways that drones could support us in keeping the grid reliable and safe in the future.”
Dr Vidyadhar Peesapati from The University of Manchester said: “With demand increasing, we need to maximise the resilience of overhead lines, the spine of UK electricity. The ambition of this project helps us address this challenge while moving the UK one step further towards a low carbon future that ensures reliability and value for the consumer.”