Rotor Unveils Airtruck and Sprayhawk: Drones with Helicopter DNA – Uplaza

New Heavy-Elevate UAVs Purpose to Revolutionize Agricultural and Utility Operations with Prolonged Flight Instances and Unmatched Payload Capability

by DRONELIFE Options Editor Jim Magil

A New Hampshire-based firm is combining the sturdiness, prolonged flight time and heavy-lifting capabilities of helicopter expertise with the maneuverability and autonomous operation of unmanned plane, to introduce the 2 largest drones produced for the business market.

Rotor Applied sciences just lately stated it could start manufacturing of Airtruck, a utility UAV with a payload capability of 1,000-plus kilos, and the Sprayhawk, an agricultural UAV with 110-gallon spraying capability in time for the 2025 mannequin 12 months. Based mostly on the Robinson R44 full-scale helicopter, the 2 new UAV’s every may have a most takeoff weight of two,500 kilos and can promote for an introductory worth of lower than a million {dollars}.

“We’re using these helicopter platforms and adding a very high level of autonomy and digital flight controls that allows an operator to fly it like a drone,” Rotor CEO Hector Xu stated in an interview. He added that the introduction of the 2 workhorse UAVs can be transformative for quite a lot of industries, notably people who contain working at very low altitudes. They may be substituted for manned plane for any mission deemed too soiled or unsafe for a human pilot to carry out.

“They’re heavy-lift UAVs, very large drones, and I think that it’s kind of this clash of two worlds, of the drone world and the helicopter world,” he stated.

The Robinson R44 mannequin, which gives the physique of each of the brand new plane fashions, is the world’s hottest gentle helicopter, Xu stated. The plane is a full-size, four-seat chopper constructed by the Robinson Helicopter Firm of Torrance, California.

Rotor plans to construct out its Airtrucks and Sprayhawks using each new and used R44s. “I think the retrofit market for operators today is also going to be a pretty significant portion of what we do.”

Whereas the Airtruck might be a heavy-lift multiuse drone, adaptable for quite a lot of purposes, the Sprayhawk is particularly designed for the aerial purposes of agricultural supplies.

“The air truck is this kind of multi-mission platform. It obviously can do a lot of things just as it ships from the factory,” Xu stated. “We see it as a pickup truck.”

He stated its capability to elevate and haul massive payloads for lengthy distances is essentially the most vital facet of the Airtruck.

“In most drones, you’re counting grams. But with what we have here, you can keep a thousand pounds of whatever you want in the air for an hour and fly at 60, 70 knots, or up to 100 miles an hour.”

The Sprayhawk then again is specifically designed as an agricultural drone. It comes geared up with a tank-and-boom system in addition to agricultural navigation gear and software program. It could actually carry about 110 gallons of water, and might cowl about 240 acres per hour, which provides it a spraying capability many instances that of the biggest spray drone constructed by DJI, Xu stated.

To this point, Rotor has constructed prototypes of every of the brand new varieties of plane, in addition to one manufacturing mannequin of the Airtruck, and is near finishing a second manufacturing mannequin within the Sprayhawk configuration. The corporate is at the moment flight testing the automobiles and hopes to have the ability to launch the outcomes of these assessments quickly, Xu stated.

“Our goal is to deliver a couple of these before the end of the year and get these into the hands of customers. Our production target for next year, for 2025, will be 20 unmanned aircraft, both of Airtruck and Sprayhawk configuration,” Xu stated.

Rotor stated it’s opening up orders to clients within the US and Brazil for the 2025 mannequin 12 months Airtrucks and Sprayhawks, with supply slots obtainable for late 2025 and early 2026. “The first 2025 production run will be limited to 15 Sprayhawks and 10 Airtrucks. Introductory pricing is $850,000 for the Airtruck and $990,000 for the Sprayhawk for orders placed before December 15, 2024,” Rotor stated in a press launch.

The corporate plans to construct the plane fashions in a manufacturing hangar that’s set to open quickly in its hometown of Nashua, New Hampshire with a second manufacturing hangar deliberate to open subsequent 12 months. Xu stated Rotor will use principally American-made elements within the manufacturing course of.

“We use almost all U.S. supply chains,” he stated. He added that the corporate builds a variety of the plane’s elements itself, “and for the things that we don’t build all of our key technology partners are based in the U.S.”

Xu stated one other benefit of basing its UAVs on established helicopter platforms is their sturdiness. The ensuing business merchandise might be designed to final 10 or 20 years. As a result of they’ve solely come into widespread use lately, conventionally produced business drones have but to have the ability to reveal such endurance.

“We have single helicopters that have had over 10,000 hours in operation. That’s certainly unheard of for anything in the drone world.,” he stated. “We want to offer to drone operators something that has that sort of capability and that sort of durability.”

Whereas industry-leading DJI has established one mannequin for achievement within the drone {industry}, small startup Rotor has its personal plan to develop and maintain its enterprise.

“We want to provide great customer service. We want to provide heavy-duty, American-made UAVs that meet the long-term needs of customers,” Xu stated.

“That message has really resonated with a lot of the people that we talk to,” he stated. “We really think we have a really exciting product and we hope people will be excited by what we do.”

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Jim Magill is a Houston-based author with nearly a quarter-century of expertise overlaying technical and financial developments within the oil and gasoline {industry}. After retiring in December 2019 as a senior editor with S&P World Platts, Jim started writing about rising applied sciences, comparable to synthetic intelligence, robots and drones, and the methods during which they’re contributing to our society. Along with DroneLife, Jim is a contributor to Forbes.com and his work has appeared within the Houston Chronicle, U.S. Information & World Report, and Unmanned Programs, a publication of the Affiliation for Unmanned Car Programs Worldwide.

 

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