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Transportation

California Company Plans Tests For Airfreight-Carrying Cargo Drones (siliconbeat.com) 55

Their ultimate goal is "a cargo drone the size of a jetliner" built with sturdy, light-weight carbon fiber composites and supplemental electric engines to reduce fuel consumption. Long-time Slashdot reader linuxwrangler writes: Backed by Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper, drone startup Natilus is attempting to reduce global airfreight costs by 50% through the use of autonomous cargo drones. To reduce regulatory and infrastructure burden, they plan to have their cargo drones take off and land on water 12 miles offshore and fly over uninhabited areas below controlled airspace. Shipments that take 11 hours in a 747 would take 30 in the drone but at half the cost. Container shipping is less than half the cost of the drone but takes three weeks. Test flights of a 30 foot prototype over San Pablo Bay north of San Francisco are planned for this summer.
The company hopes to start flying a 140-foot drone carrying 200,000 pounds by 2020, which Draper says will provide goods transportation "without the friction and costs associated with keeping people alive on airplanes."
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California Company Plans Tests For Airfreight-Carrying Cargo Drones

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  • You are not going to beat cargo ships for costs and you're not going to beat air freight for speed -- what the hell is this startup's business case?

    • You honestly don't think there is a market for the space between "overnight" and "two weeks"?

    • You are not going to beat cargo ships for costs and you're not going to beat air freight for speed -- what the hell is this startup's business case?

      The middle ground - those cases that don't need to be delivered within a day, but do need to be delivered within 48 hours/3 weeks. As per TFS, if you only need to guarantee delivery within the next couple of days, currently your only option is to pay for full air-freight at over 4 times the cost.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Slightly longer transit time for significant cost savings versus waiting much longer for the cheapest cost... there's a huge market for such a mode of transport.

      The first thing off the top of my head is perishable food and drink. As crazy as it sounds, there are milk producers air freighting fresh milk from Australia into China today. The milk costs over $15/gal and people buy it because of quality concerns with local Chinese milk. A significant portion of that cost would be transport. Container shipping is

      • They are landing this drone twelve miles off shore. Pretty sure that's to avoid pesky government regulation at the 12 mile limit [wikipedia.org] but that means they have to off-load at sea, load it into boats, take it to harbor, go through customs and then ship the milk from the nearest port to the final destination. How is that going to work out for Beijing? Or Chicago? Most of delivery is about the final mile. Landing these things at sea just adds more distance and complication to that.
  • Assuming this actually gets off the ground (pun intended), won't this affect airline pricing? Or are commercial airlines not doing freight?

  • Just to be clear (Score:4, Informative)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Sunday April 02, 2017 @08:15PM (#54161993) Journal

    Ocean freight is more typically 1/10th the price of airfreight.

    Ie 40k lbs/19 metric tons from Munich to Chicago would be about $3500 by ocean, or about $34,000 by air charter.

  • Can you make more smaller ones? Can they be monitored all the trip, to make sure they arrive safely? (Use "land pilots.").. I also find it ironic that they don't offer luggage transportation services.
  • somebody owns it and if you fly below controlled airspace then you're fair game. Pull!

  • There are some neat applications of sub-sonic high-speed drone swarms from US airframes, where they keep at speed, drop an entire cargo of drones to hunter killer the Russians, and then swoop in to pick them up - at speed.

    Doing cargo drops and pickups sounds way easier. Plus nobody is trying to shoot the airframe down.

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