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Remotely Flown Cargo Plane Gets First Big Test From Reliable Robotics and FedEx

  • Twelve-minute flight is next step toward FAA certification
  • US Air Force is eyeing technology for logistics, refueling
Reliable Robotics flew a plane in California on Nov. 21 without a human on board. It’s seeking regulatory approval for its remote-pilot system. The small cargo plane was in the air for 12 minutes and safely landed. It was controlled remotely from the company’s command center.Source: Bloomberg
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Reliable Robotics Corp. said Wednesday that it’s flown a small cargo plane on loan from FedEx Corp. without a human on board, a step toward the autonomous flight startup winning regulatory approval for its remote-pilot system.

In coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration, the 12-minute flight of the Cessna 208B Grand Caravan on Nov. 21 took off from and landed at Hollister Municipal Airport in Northern California. A remote pilot handled all the radio calls and monitored the plane during the flight from about 50 miles away at the company’s command center in Mountain View, California. It was Reliable Robotics’ second automated flight, after flying a much smaller Cessna 172 in 2019.