Drone Leak Investigation · Fraser Valley
District Energy & Buried Heat Loop Survey in Mission, BC
Buried hot-water and steam distribution mapped by thermal drone — line losses, failed insulation, and active leaks on district energy systems, hospital and university campuses, found from the air in a single evening flight. Flown by Transport Canada-certified RPAS pilots and confirmed by the ground crews serving Mission and the Fraser Valley region — since 1999 as BC's leak detection specialists.
Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT
Flying Mission: local context
Hillside homes and floodplain industry — terrain that makes ground access slow is exactly where aerial wins.
Local property profile: Hillside homes with long gravity-fed service runs, heritage downtown, and floodplain industry.
Ground conditions: Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable.
Typical district energy & buried heat loop survey work around Mission
- Hillside roof surveys
- Industrial flat inspections
- District energy utilities
- University and college campuses
- Hospital and healthcare energy plants
How the Mission survey runs
- 1
Network mapping
Routing drawings and operating temperatures define the loop. Where drawings are stale, the first flight itself recovers the true alignment — buried hot lines trace themselves thermally.
- 2
Contrast-window flight
Flown on cool evenings when the ground has shed solar gain: supply and return lines appear as clean linear signatures, and anomalies — hot spots, plumes, lateral spread — stand out against them.
- 3
Anomaly classification
Uniform warmth is normal line loss. Localised intensity, asymmetric spread, or surface wetness signatures are classified as insulation failure or active leakage and ranked by severity.
- 4
Dig-sheet report
Each actionable anomaly delivered with RTK coordinates, thermal evidence, and severity ranking — the document your mechanical contractor digs from, first time, right spot.
Mission questions, answered
How well does thermal imaging work on buried heating lines?
It is the single best application of aerial thermography on buried utilities. A line running 60–120 °C under a metre of soil produces a clear, continuous surface signature in the right window — and a breach or failed insulation section produces an unmistakable local intensification. We routinely recover the routing of loops whose drawings were lost decades ago, then rank every anomaly along them.
What does a leak cost a district energy operator compared to this survey?
A buried heat-loop leak wastes treated, chemically dosed, heated water continuously — energy, make-up water, and treatment, around the clock. Operators typically find a single confirmed leak repays the survey many times over within a season, before counting the avoided excavation of wrong-spot exploratory digs.
When should campuses fly this survey?
Late fall through early spring, on cool, dry evenings — peak season for both thermal contrast and heating load. An annual flight in the same conditions builds a year-over-year baseline, so the question shifts from 'do we have leaks?' to 'what changed since last year?' — the cheapest maintenance posture there is.
Can you legally fly drone leak surveys in Mission?
Yes — our pilots hold Transport Canada RPAS certification with advanced-operations capability, and Mission flights run under whatever airspace authorizations the location requires. Hillside homes and floodplain industry — terrain that makes ground access slow is exactly where aerial wins. Flight planning, NOTAM checks, and authorizations are part of the service, not your problem.
How do Mission ground conditions affect what the survey reads?
Mission ground is predominantly steep till and bedrock benches above Fraser floodplain. Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable. For buried-leak work that matters: escaping water changes the moisture and thermal behaviour of exactly that ground, and our analysts interpret the surface signal against the local soil character — then our acoustic ground crews confirm the suspect zones before anyone digs.
What does district energy & buried heat loop survey cost in Mission?
Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Mission. Single-site surveys typically start in the high hundreds; network corridors, portfolios, and multi-asset programs are quoted by scope. The free phone consult (604-239-9934) produces a firm number in about five minutes.
Other drone leak services in Mission
Underground Water Main Leak Survey in Mission
Aerial thermal screening of buried water mains and service corridors — kilometres of distribution line surveyed per flight, leak-suspect zones mapped for targeted ground confirmation. The screening layer that shrinks non-revenue water programs from guesswork to a short list.
View servicePost-Storm Portfolio Leak Assessment in Mission
After an atmospheric river, windstorm, or freeze event — every roof and site in your portfolio triaged by drone in days, damage and active water entry documented while the evidence is fresh and the insurer's clock is running.
View serviceAerial Moisture Orthomosaic Mapping in Mission
The deliverable layer: survey-grade, georeferenced moisture orthomosaics — radiometric thermal fused with RTK photogrammetry — exported to CAD and GIS for engineers, consultants, and owners who need leak evidence they can measure from.
View serviceWater Tank & Standpipe Leak Inspection in Mission
Municipal reservoirs, standpipes, elevated tanks, and rooftop tanks inspected by drone — shell weeps, overflow malfunction, wet insulation, saturated foundations, and coating failure documented without ladders, lifts, or confined-space entry.
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District Energy & Buried Heat Loop Survey near Mission
Need district energy & buried heat loop survey in Mission?
Free phone consult — site, access, airspace, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.