ai drones

Cars Aren’t Going Anywhere, and More Transportation News Thi…

If experiments on the ground are cool, experiments in the sky are cooler. And so we can count ourselves extra icey this week, as we got to see to high-flying studies. First, we chatted with aviation company UAV Turbines, which is building mini, watermelon-sized jet engines. Pourquoi? Turns out 500- to 1,000-pound drones need power to stay aloft, too, and the batteries that power smaller flyers aren’t always up to the task. Then we spoke to the designers and executives behind Rolls-Royce’s transformation of a Qantas jet that was still flying passengers last week into a very expensive flying testbed for experimental jet engines.

Previous New York Sponsors “Fly-In” To Show How Drones Can be Used to…
Next U.S. Department of Interior Grounds DJI Drones

Check Also

Independent high-tech wild horse survey reveals one-tenth th…

NSW Environment Minister Penny Sharp has been called on to stop the aerial shooting of …

Drones Find Dozens of Landmines Littering Ukraine So They Ca…

At an explosives test range at Oklahoma State University, Jasper Baur tested his technology’s ability …