BlueROV2 is an underwater ROV that surveys the darkest depths –  well, the really very gloomy depths anyway – with the help of a Raspberry Pi 4 wearing its bespoke Navigator Flight Controller as a HAT.

What is an underwater ROV?

If you’re not sure what an underwater ROV is, the short answer is: a Remotely Operated Vehicle you chuck in the sea. But if you’re our favourite kind of geek and wish to feast on a much longer answer, Blue Robotics has shared a short history and explanation of how they work, including the excellent tidbit that the first ever ROV was called the Poodle.

A 1080p camera feeds back a live video stream to the surface

BlueROV2 is billed as “the world’s most affordable high-performance underwater ROV.” While $3,950 seems like a lot, this ROV buying guide quotes prices up to $40,000. We like to think our affordable Raspberry Pi brain had a lot to do with bringing that cost down

What’s it made of?

The device measures 18 × 13.3 × 10 inches and can capture live 1080p HD video, thanks to a wide-angle low-light camera mounted to a tilt mechanism on the front. An on-board gyroscope, accelerometer, and magnetometer, along with pressure, depth, temperature, voltage, and leak detection sensors, make sure everything is functioning and navigating as it should.

ROVs are often used by police and fire departments for search and rescue missions, looking for missing people, ships, cars, and any other sunken objects

If you choose a ROV with an acrylic enclosure, you can get to a depth of 100 metres, but splash out on the aluminium option and you’re safe to dive up to 300 metres. As far as we can tell, that’s deep enough to explore right down to the sea bed over much of the North Sea and almost all of the Irish Sea. Feel free to Google other bodies of water yourself.

What does its Raspberry Pi do?

The BlueROV2 is controlled by the Navigator Flight Controller, which is a HAT designed for Raspberry Pi 4. Raspberry Pi runs Blue Robotics’ bespoke BlueOS software and handles all of the processing and computing requirements inside the ROV.

A standard Xbox controller can be used to control BlueROV2

All of those sensors are provided by the Navigator, and Raspberry Pi 4 communicates what’s happening back to base on dry land via BlueOS.

While we do think BlueROV2 is cool and all, we’re still too traumatised by the shark chase at the beginning of The Little Mermaid to watch any of the video it captures.


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