Houston Chronicle

SMART GLASSES REVEAL BIG WORLD

Augmented reality is aimed at oil patch efficiency and safety

- By Jordan Blum

The offshore worker is handling a piece of equipment on an oil platform. He looks left and sees a threedimen­sional manual of instructio­ns. Looking right, he can see a deconstruc­ted version of the equipment to better view its individual parts.

The 3-D smart glasses on display at the Offshore Technology Conference in Houston will soon be more broadly deployed to the oil fields to help energy workers operate more efficientl­y.

The glasses present an augmented reality, projecting images into one’s actual field of vision, rather than virtual reality images, which are more like putting the user into a movie. The industry has chitchatte­d about virtual and augmented reality for years, but only now is the technology advancing enough to potentiall­y become practical.

The technology now represent san industry-specific version of the widely touted Google Glass product that was indefinite­ly delayed.

“Our end goal is to have these replace safety goggles,” said Vincent Higgins, the CEO of Houston-based Optech4D, which was formed in 2012.

Several energy companies used new virtual reality headsets to tout products at this week’s OTC. The oil and gas industry has a low tolerance threshold for new technologi­es that aren’t quickly applicable, Higgins said, and presentati­ons are an obvious applicatio­n.

“The technology is very new. But it’s all about being useful. Not just shiny new toys,” Higgins said. “Two years ago, virtual reality wasn’t a reality.”

While it’s difficult to

“Two years ago, virtual reality wasn’t a reality.”

imagine many older roughnecks embracing electronic eyewear, Higgins points to the so-called “great crew change” of many energy workers now retiring — by their own choosing or not — and a bevy of younger workers replacing them, even during the ongoing downturn.

“I think the next generation ... is embracing this

Vincent Higgins of Optech4D

very quickly,” he said. Optech4D has its roots as a training simulation company, but it’s branching out to the oil field and offshore. The company offers virtual reality training compatible with new Oculus Rift headsets and other competing technologi­es.

Putting on an Oculus Rift headset at OTC, you are virtually transporte­d to the helideck on an oil platform. You feel compelled to duck down while moving past the helicopter’s tail rotor. Quickly trekking down a flight of virtual steps on the rig provides a dizzying sensation.

But it’s the augmented reality “Smartglass­es” by San Francisco-based ODG — Optech 4D provides the software and implementa­tion, not the hardware — that has more widespread potential, Higgins said.

The Smartglass­es already are being deployed with companies like Royal Dutch Shell and Siemens’ subsidiary Dresser-Rand for some maintenanc­e and inspection work, Higgins added. They need to be lighter with a wider range of view, he said, but those issues are expected to be largely resolved through a new model expected to come out in January.

The plan is to soon begin a large-scale launch into the oil fields once final industry safety certificat­ions are approved.

He’s optimistic the glasses will start becoming more common on rigs in about two years.

Each set costs about $2,700, but that’s not a lot more than a computer tablet certified for oil field work, and the costs will keep coming down as they’re mass produced, Higgins said.

As for other companies, BP used virtual reality headsets at OTC to showcase its technologi­cal capabiliti­es in enhanced oil recovery and seismic research.

Likewise, Milwaukeeb­ased Gardner Denver used Google Cardboardb­ased 3-D headsets to show off its new Thunder Series of hydraulic fracturing pump, complete with lightning-crackling graphics.

“Part of it is the ability to connect with customers,” Gardner Denver CEO Saeid Rahimian said.

 ?? Marie D. De Jesús / Houston Chronicle ?? Guests visit the Optech4D booth at the Offshore Technology Conference and learn about uses of 3-D smart glasses.
Marie D. De Jesús / Houston Chronicle Guests visit the Optech4D booth at the Offshore Technology Conference and learn about uses of 3-D smart glasses.
 ?? Marie D. De Jesús / Houston Chronicle ?? Missy Keller tests the Optech4D R-7 Smart Glasses, which provide workers with data about the equipment around them and safety procedures to follow.
Marie D. De Jesús / Houston Chronicle Missy Keller tests the Optech4D R-7 Smart Glasses, which provide workers with data about the equipment around them and safety procedures to follow.

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