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Introduction to Warehouse Drones

How Do Drones Work in the Warehouse?

This introductory primer is provided to explain how warehouse drones are used and operate in warehouses and distribution centers. Consider this a crash course in features, benefits and even challenges of deploying drones in the warehouse. As one of the original pioneers of using drones in the warehouse, contributors to this primer include warehouse processionals and aeronautic engineers who have spent thousands of hours flying warehouse drones and have collected enough data to provide an unbiased assessement and overview of this supply chain technology.

WATCH: Introduction to Warehouse Drones

What Are Warehouse Drones Used For?

Warehouse drones are used to help enhance cycle counting activities in the warehouse. Inventory accuracy is a critical component to managing a warehouse, and historically is very labor intensive. As fulfillment demands have increased, warehouses are forced to carry large amounts of inventory. Unfortunately, warehouses have limited footprints and instead of spreading out their operation, they have embraced high vertical storage shelves for their inventory. While this helps solve the storage challenges, this has impacted the ability for warehouse workers to appropriately cycle count inventory which entails scanning stored goods. This was a driving factor to introducing warehouse drones as a means of scanning both high and low locations of stored goods.

To maintain the richness, comprehensiveness and other advantages of Vimaan’s cycle counting approach, and to eliminate the downsides of using drones to accomplish this goal,  Vimaan has engineered StorTRACK, an even more affordable, safer, and faster solution than any other product on the market.

How Do Warehouse Drones Work?

Warehouse drones for inventory management

Warehouse drones are capable of reach the highest stored goods in the warehouse, keeping employees safe on the ground. But be careful, if a drone falls from heights over 30 feet and was to land on an employee this could lead to serious injuries. At best, regardless of the technology provider warehouse drones cannot sustain flights longer than 20 minutes due to battery life limitations. Once depleted, batteries are typically swapped out by warehouse workers. This manual activity reduces the “autonomous” promises of warehouse drones. Suppliers will suggest deploying multiple warehouse drones to ensure constant scanning. Managing multiple warehouse drones requires training and additional headcount.

How Warehouse Drones Capture Inventory

Warehouse drones have small field of views

Warehouse drones are an advancement over hand scanning performed by workers (especially for higher shelves, which typically require scissor lifts). A warehouse drone can scan a 300-foot-long warehouse aisle in just over 5 hours. However, this time does not include the stoppages required for warehouse drones to be charged every 20 minutes. Equipped with their own onboard camera and lights, warehouse drones are typically used to scan one large LPN found on a pallet or large box stored on a warehouse rack. Because of weight limitations, a warehouse drone will only carry a single camera, which provides a limited field of view (typically no more than 12 inches). The small field of views will require warehouse drones to slowly fly and hover in front of inventory to ensure the barcodes are capture. Warehouse drones are an advancement over hand scanning performed by workers (especially for higher shelves, which typically require scissor lifts). A warehouse drone can scan a 300 foot long warehouse aisle in just over 5 hours. However, this time does not include the stoppages required for warehouse drones to be charged every 20 minutes.

How Do Warehouse Drones Work Indoors?

Warehouse drones are subject to warehouse hazards

To prevent injury to workers and damage to the warehouse drone, associates are required to clear aisles of fellow employees and equipment. As mentioned, warehouse drones are required to hover in place to adequately capture barcodes with their small field of views, this hovering creates drafts that inhale loose warehouse material (like shrink wrap or packing tape) into the drone rotors. See an example of this here. When this happens the warehouse drone will continue to try and break free of the material until its battery dies or a warehouse worker goes up to retrieve it.

Where Will Warehouse Drones Benefit You?

The benefits and challenges of using warehouse drones are typically discovered after a month of use. Be cautious of committing to long term agreements without truly understanding how warehouse drones will interact with your specific warehouse environment. Solution providers should offer a limited time trial of the technology prior to committing multi-month or year contracts. Warehouses that continue to use the drone technology discover that it will likely improve cycle counting speeds and potentially reduce specific headcount. While the expectation is that warehouse drones will help reduce the number of employees, there are additional responsibilities and new duties that come with operating this technology. So in most instances the warehouse workers will still need to remain on hand to change batteries, clean shelves, clear aisles and keep an eye of the warehouse drones.

As they fly workers need to keep a close eye on warehouse drones
What is cycle count scanning?
Countless hours of warehouse drone missions have informed StorTRACK

Automated Inventory Management Beyond Warehouse Drones

Warehouses understand that automating cycle counting is an essential step in improving their inventory management. Warehouses that have experience with warehouse drones have discovered a safer and faster cycle counting auomation solution with the Vimaan StorTRACK. This computer vision solution includes a field of view 4X larger and a battery life of up to 8 hours, compared to 20 minutes for drones. Warehouse drones are intriguing and can serve as a demonstration of how warehouses are embracing innovation, if they are looking for ways to improve results and reduce headcount, they will discover there are better options, such as StorTRACK.

AI wAReHOUSE Cycle count automation guide

Learn how AI Warehouses have improved their inventory accuracies to over 99%, while reducing cycle count headcount.

 

Inventory Cycle Counting Resources

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