UAV & Drones
BRINC Launches Guardian Drone for Advanced 911 Response
BRINC unveils the Guardian drone with 60 mph speed, 10-pound payload, Starlink connectivity, and automated battery swapping for emergency response.
This article is based on an official company statement from Blake Resnick, Founder & CEO of BRINC.
BRINC has officially announced the launch of its latest product, the Guardian, positioning it as the most capable 911 response drone developed to date. According to a public statement by BRINC Founder and CEO Blake Resnick, the new unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is designed to serve as a practical, highly advanced tool for Drone as First Responder (DFR) programs.
We are observing a significant leap in public safety aviation technology, with the Guardian boasting unprecedented flight times, heavy payload capacities, and global connectivity designed to augment or replace traditional manned aircraft.
“This is the closest thing to a police helicopter replacement that the drone industry has ever produced,” stated Blake Resnick, Founder & CEO of BRINC.
The Guardian drone introduces a robust set of specifications tailored specifically for high-stakes emergency environments. Based on the company’s announcement, the aircraft can sustain flight for over an hour and reach a top speed of 60 mph.
One of the most notable features of the new platform is its 10-pound payload capacity. According to Resnick, this allows the drone to carry and deliver critical life-saving equipment directly to an emergency scene, including full-size defibrillators and flotation devices.
In a major development for DFR operations, the Guardian features an integrated Starlink panel. The company states that this integration provides the drone with unlimited range anywhere in the world, effectively removing the traditional radio frequency line-of-sight limitations that have historically constrained municipal drone operations.
To support its mission as a premier first responder tool, the Guardian is equipped with a highly advanced sensor suite. The camera system includes a pair of high-definition thermal imagers capable of 64x zoom on a 1280-resolution thermal feed.
Alongside its thermal capabilities, the drone features a 4K camera system with low-light capabilities that offers a staggering 640x total zoom. Additional tactical hardware mounted on the airframe includes a laser-excited phosphor spotlight and a laser rangefinder. Acoustically, the Guardian is designed to command a scene from the air. It utilizes an ultra-loud speaker capable of emitting a siren tone three times louder than a standard police car siren, according to the manufacturer’s specifications.
The combination of the Guardian’s extended flight time, 60 mph top speed, and Starlink connectivity makes it the first DFR drone truly capable of pursuing vehicles. Resnick highlighted that this specific capability can save lives by mitigating the need for dangerous, high-speed police chases on the ground.
The drone does not operate in isolation. BRINC has paired the aircraft with the “Guardian Station,” a robotic charging nest. When the drone lands, this system robotically swaps batteries and payloads in a matter of seconds, ensuring the aircraft is rapidly ready for its next deployment without human intervention.
According to the company’s statement, this ecosystem pushes the boundaries of current DFR programs. Compared to legacy systems, BRINC claims the Guardian and its station cover seven times more area, more than double the operational uptime, and quadruple the total time spent on scene.
The introduction of the BRINC Guardian represents a pivotal shift in how law enforcement and emergency services approach aerial support. By integrating Starlink for global connectivity and offering a 10-pound payload capacity, we see BRINC moving the DFR concept from passive aerial observation to active, physical intervention. The ability to deliver a defibrillator or flotation device ahead of ground units could drastically reduce response times for critical medical emergencies.
Furthermore, the automated battery-swapping capability of the Guardian Station addresses one of the most significant bottlenecks in commercial drone operations, turnaround time. If the system performs in the field exactly as stated in the company’s announcement, it could offer municipalities a highly cost-effective and safer alternative to maintaining expensive manned aviation units.
BRINC Unveils Guardian: A Next-Generation 911 Response Drone
Technical Specifications and Capabilities
Global Connectivity via Starlink
Advanced Optics, Audio, and Sensor Payloads
Visual and Acoustic Dominance
Redefining Drone as First Responder (DFR) Operations
The Guardian Station Ecosystem
AirPro News Analysis
Shifting the Paradigm of Public Safety Aviation
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
The Guardian is a new 911 response drone developed by BRINC, designed to act as a highly capable Drone as First Responder (DFR) and a potential replacement for traditional police helicopters.
According to BRINC, the Guardian has a top speed of 60 mph and can fly for over an hour on a single deployment.
The Guardian Station is a robotic charging nest that automatically swaps the drone’s batteries and payloads in seconds to maximize operational uptime.
The drone utilizes an integrated Starlink panel, which the company states gives it unlimited range anywhere in the world.Sources
Photo Credit: BRINC