Elroy Air Chaparral
Cargo | |
---|---|
Role | Unmanned cargo delivery system |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Elroy Air |
First flight | 12 November 2023[1] |
The Elroy Air Cargo is an unmanned cargo aircraft developed by American startup company Elroy Air, intended to replace land delivery trucks on inefficient routes with unmanned aircraft.
History
[edit]The San Francisco-based company was founded in November 2016 by David Merrill, CEO and Clint Cope, VP engineering. Elroy Air initially pursued the electric aircraft VTOL air taxi market, but turned to autonomous cargo aircraft to avoid the complications of passenger-carrying certification. In December 2017, the company secured US$4.6 million of seed funding, led by aerial mobility investor Levitate Capital.[2]
By early 2018, a full-scale prototype had been tested at Half Moon Bay Airport, south of San Francisco. Its lift system—rotors, motors and controllers—was rigged on a truck-based testbed to verify the aerodynamic lift produced and the aircraft noise levels for urban operations. In early 2018 a subscale prototype was under construction to validate the aerodynamics and controls, with ground testing planned in early March 2018 and first flight by late March. The full-scale aircraft was forecast to be flown by late summer 2018.[2]
In early 2019, Elroy Air raised another $4.6 million, giving it a total of $9.2 million.[3] On August 14, the Chaparral made its first flight at Camp Roberts, California, completing a 64 second hover.The hybrid-electric propulsion system for beyond-line-of-sight testing should fly in the second half of 2020 on a second prototype. A further Series A funding round was required for serial production.[4]
In January 2022, unveiled the pre-production Chaparral C1. Its cargo capacity reached 500 lb (230 kg), while its range was claimed to be 300 mi (480 km).[5]
Design
[edit]The tandem-wing design employed in the air cargo role has a pusher propeller for forward flight, six propellers under twin booms for vertical lift and a pod to carry 150 lb (68 kg) of cargo under the central fuselage. The hybrid electric powertrain has variable-pitch rotors with a large diameter to turn more slowly, for redundancy and to reduce noise. Its 150 mile (240 km) operational radius is optimized for express delivery. Ground robots are planned to be employed for ground handling and one pilot would be responsible for an entire aircraft fleet.[2]
Specifications
[edit]Data from Aviation Week[4]
General characteristics
- Crew: None (autonomous)
- Capacity: 500 lb (230 kg)
- Max takeoff weight: 1,215 lb (551 kg)
- Powerplant: 6 × electric rotors
- Powerplant: 1 × pusher propeller
- Range: 300 mi (480 km, 260 nmi)
References
[edit]- ^ https://www.forbes.com/sites/edgarsten/2023/11/16/elroy-air-autonomous-hybrid-electric-vtol-makes-historic-first-flight/
- ^ a b c Graham Warwick (Feb 2, 2018). "Unmanned Cargo Aircraft Head Toward Flight Tests". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
- ^ Jeremy Bogaisky (Feb 13, 2019). "Before Amazon Drops Packages On Your House From The Air, Drones May Start To Transform Air Cargo". Forbes.
- ^ a b Graham Warwick (Aug 29, 2019). "Unmanned Cargo Aircraft Take A Step Closer With Elroy Air Flight". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
- ^ Blain, Loz (2022-01-27). "Elroy Air unveils its heavy-lift, long-range, hybrid cargo VTOL". New Atlas. Retrieved 2022-01-27.
Further reading
[edit]- Mike Murphy (December 22, 2017). "Massive robot-powered drones may solve everything wrong with package delivery". Quartz Media.
- Marco Margaritoff (December 22, 2017). "Elroy Air's 'Aluminum Falcon' VTOL Drone Can Carry Up to 150 Pounds". The Drive. Meredith Corporation.