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Bell’s Autonomous Pod Transport 70 cargo drone completes flight as part of NASA demo

Bell has com­plet­ed a suc­cess­ful flight of its Autonomous Pod Trans­port (APT) 70 as part of a joint flight demon­stra­tion with NASA, which helped to show­case the safe­ty and util­i­ty of unmanned air­craft for future com­mer­cial uses.

The com­pa­ny was select­ed to par­tic­i­pate in NASA’s Sys­tems Inte­gra­tion and Oper­a­tional­i­sa­tion (SIO) activ­i­ty in 2018, which includes mul­ti­ple flight demon­stra­tions focus­ing on dif­fer­ent types of Unmanned Air­craft Sys­tems (UAS) and their flight envi­ron­ments.

The objec­tive of Bell’s SIO demon­stra­tion was to exe­cute a Beyond Visu­al Line-of-Sight (BVLOS) mis­sion in an urban envi­ron­ment tran­si­tion­ing into and out of Class B air­space rep­re­sent­ing future com­mer­cial flights.

Bel­ls Autonomous Pod Trans­port APT 70 Cred­it Bell

Michael Thack­er, Exec­u­tive Vice Pres­i­dent, Inno­va­tion and Com­mer­cial Busi­ness, said: “This suc­cess­ful demon­stra­tion high­lights the great poten­tial for the APT 70 to com­plete com­plex mis­sions for busi­ness­es and health­care providers.

“With team­mates like NASA, we can carve a path for­ward for future com­mer­cial oper­a­tions to solve the car­go and goods trans­porta­tion chal­lenges our world cur­rent­ly faces.”

Launch­ing from Bell’s Floyd Carl­son field in Fort Worth, Texas, the APT 70 flew a pre-pro­grammed 10-mile cir­cuit path along the Trin­i­ty Riv­er. Once armed from the ground con­trol sta­tion, the APT 70 ini­ti­at­ed a ver­ti­cal take­off.

The vehi­cle then rotat­ed to fly on its wings where it became near­ly silent to the ground below. The vehi­cle exe­cut­ed its mis­sion pro­file at an alti­tude of 500 feet above ground lev­el. The route includ­ed a road cross­ing and tran­si­tion in and out of Class B air­space, with com­mu­ni­ca­tion between the ground sta­tion and the air­craft main­tained through a redun­dant datalink. 

A pro­to­type air­borne detect and avoid sys­tem, along with visu­al observers, pro­vid­ed the remote pilot with aware­ness of air traf­fic in the vicin­i­ty and rec­om­mend­ed flight maneu­vers.

Mis­sion results will be used to eval­u­ate and demon­strate Detect and Avoid (DAA) and Com­mand and Con­trol (C2) tech­nolo­gies for use in future cer­ti­fied oper­a­tions in con­trolled and uncon­trolled air­space.

Data col­lect­ed dur­ing the demon­stra­tion will be used to sup­port future stan­dards devel­op­ment and Fed­er­al Avi­a­tion Admin­is­tra­tion (FAA) cer­ti­fi­ca­tion guide­lines. 

Mauri­cio Rivas, UAS inte­gra­tion in the NAS project man­ag­er at NASA’s Arm­strong Flight Research Cen­ter, added: “NASA is excit­ed to part­ner with Bell to help accel­er­ate rou­tine UAS oper­a­tions into the nation­al air­space with this suc­cess­ful flight demo.

“Our efforts with Bell and our oth­er SIO indus­try part­ners will help com­mer­cial UAS move clos­er towards cer­ti­fi­ca­tion to make mis­sions like this trans­port flight a com­mon event.”

Bell’s tech­nol­o­gy part­ners for the demon­stra­tion include Xwing and the Uni­ver­si­ty of Mass­a­chu­setts Amherst’s Cen­ter for Col­lab­o­ra­tive Adap­tive Sens­ing of the Atmos­phere (CASA).

Inte­grat­ed onto the APT 70 is Xwing’s air­borne, mul­ti-sens­ing detect and avoid sys­tem. Xwing’s sys­tem com­pris­es of radars, ADS‑B, visu­al sys­tem and onboard pro­cess­ing to pro­vide air­craft tracks and pilot alerts trans­mit­ted to the ground sta­tion.

The APT 70 also includes CASA’s intu­itive, inte­grat­ed dis­play to pro­vide pilots with local weath­er risk aware­ness and route-based weath­er alerts issued by their City Warn Haz­ard Noti­fi­ca­tion Sys­tem deployed in the DFW metro­plex.

It is envi­sioned that in the future, an oper­a­tional APT 70 could pro­vide effi­cient, rapid and depend­able trans­port for pay­loads up to 70lbs — and is esti­mat­ed to be three times as fast as ground trans­porta­tion.

The vehi­cle is capa­ble of autonomous flight, auto­mat­i­cal­ly fly­ing a pro­grammed flight route and han­dling an array of con­tin­gency func­tions. Poten­tial uses for the APT 70 include med­ical deliv­er­ies, third-par­ty logis­tics, off­shore deliv­ery and human­i­tar­i­an relief.

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Jason Pritchard

Jason Pritchard is the Editor of eVTOL Insights. He holds a BA from Leicester's De Montfort University and has worked in Journalism and Public Relations for more than a decade. Outside of work, Jason enjoys playing and watching football and golf. He also has a keen interest in Ancient Egypt.

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