Haniole completes and the autonomy is the first independent flight of the Leonardo Helevree AW139
Haniole and the Earth’s proximity successfully completed the independence of the Earth with the first independent test flight from the Leonardo Aw139 helicopter, which represents a major landmark to support the American Logistical Services conductor in the Marine Corps (ALC). This flight shows the feasibility of uncomfortable aircraft that is capable of working in disputed environments without a pilot or a distant operator.
The test trip was tested on AW139 in Honeywell in Phoenix, Arizona in May, and represents a decisive step in efforts to provide independent logistical support to the USA’s naval weapon (USMC). For the first time, the conditions of the main automated pilot of AW139 were controlled directly by the autonomy program near the land, without experimental insertion, the exact control of flying and independent decisions.
“It is not only this successful offer, a big step in creating new USMC brand capabilities, but also creates a possible path to use by other helicopters as well,” said Bob Buddik, the president, electronic solutions, Haniole Technologies.
“Along with the independence of the nearby land and Leonardo, we explain how current aircraft can be adapted to trusted flight electronics to support the next generation of defense logistics. Unstable aircraft will be vital in maintaining service and women as safe as possible in disputed environments, and we are one step away from realizing that vision.”
The ALC program, orbit under the Other Transactions Convention (OTA), with the independence of the nearby land as a major performance, aims to develop and deploy independent air logistical systems that reduce risks to employees and increase the speed and size of the display operations. The future test will expand the capabilities of self -government, including avoiding automatic obstacles, and integration in the progress of military logistical action, which leads to a safer and non -identical delivery system to help enhance operational readiness and improve the theater response.
“This journey near Earth Autonomy is shown in developing trusted autonomy in the real world,” said Dr. Sanjif Singh, CEO of Earth Autonomy.
“By controlling the AW139 airlines with our self -government system, we have shown that independent, developed independent logistical services using current platforms are not only possible – it is now happening. This ability is necessary to reduce risks to military personnel and ensure flexible supply chains in this field.”
Haniole’s partnership with autonomy near Earth seeks to develop an affordable, developmental, developed independent solution and can be ratified for future missions. HoneyWell provides engineering engineering task systems for both the update and the next generation. These solutions are designed to meet the operational demands today with a long -term shift support to a very unavailable and independent trip.