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Cell Tower Inspection Drone Log

Mission log for telecom inspection pilots: flights, batteries, site id / equipment findings and outcomes — the per-job record this industry audits.

RF exposure is the invisible hazard — carriers require RF awareness procedures and sometimes power-down coordination, and your log should show that coordination happened.

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Missions
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Flight minutes
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Missions, last 90 days
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Sites/clients

No entries yet — add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.

⚠️ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only — not certified avionics, not a source of regulatory truth. Always verify against official sources (FAA) and your operator's approved documents before flying.

Free cell tower inspection drone log for telecom inspection pilots: missions with site id / equipment findings, flight time, batteries and outcomes — structured the way this industry's clients audit.

About Cell Tower Inspection Drone Log

In this niche, tower inspections feed carrier and tower-company asset databases: antenna inventories, mount conditions, RF equipment audits — all keyed to site IDs and structure types. The discipline that separates professionals: RF exposure is the invisible hazard — carriers require RF awareness procedures and sometimes power-down coordination, and your log should show that coordination happened. This log captures each mission with the industry's own keys — site id / equipment findings — alongside flight time, batteries and outcome, with 90-day activity and per-client tiles maintained automatically. The export reads like the vendor record your clients' compliance and audit processes expect.

How to use Cell Tower Inspection Drone Log

  1. 1Log each mission right after landing — keys, duration, outcome.
  2. 2Mark partials and aborts honestly; they drive refly scheduling.
  3. 3Export per client or per period when audits and invoices ask.

Why use Cell Tower Inspection Drone Log?

  • Industry-keyed fields: site id / equipment findings
  • Outcome tracking including aborts — refly planning built in
  • 90-day activity and per-client tiles maintained automatically
  • Encodes the discipline: rf exposure is the invisible hazard
  • CSV export = the vendor record clients audit

Frequently asked questions

What's the RF hazard protocol for drone tower inspections?+

Carriers and tower companies typically require: RF awareness training, maintaining distances from active antennas per their EME guidance, and for close work coordinating power-down or power-reduction windows with the NOC. The aircraft tolerates RF better than a climber's body, but transmit interference can hit the control link too. Logging the coordination reference per mission (NOC ticket, power-down window) is contractual evidence — this log's detail field exists for exactly that.

How does this log interact with my regulatory flight log?+

They're complementary layers: your regulatory log (Part 107-style records, permission references) proves the flights were legal; this mission log proves they were professional — deliverables, findings, outcomes in the client's own vocabulary. Many operators export both for the same audit. Keeping them separate keeps each clean; keeping them both is what enterprise clients increasingly specify in vendor agreements.

Is this tool private — who can see my entries?+

Only you. Entries live in your browser's local storage and never leave your device, so there is no account, no cloud sync and no one else with access. Because the data is device-local, export a CSV backup before clearing browser data or switching computers.

Can I export these records for an audit?+

Yes — one click exports your complete mission history as a CSV file that opens in Excel, Google Sheets or Numbers. The export preserves every column exactly as entered, so you can print it, attach it to paperwork, or hand it to an inspector, buyer or insurance underwriter as a supporting summary alongside your official records.

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