Skyryse Unveils Autonomous Helicopter for Urban Air Mobility, Targets
Economics of Commuter Cars
By Brian
Garrett-Glaser | December 17, 2019
Send Feedback
Send Feedback
Luna, a Robinson R44 modified by
Skyryse, makes a fully autonomous flight above Los Angeles, California.
(Skyryse)
In Los Angeles, California, Skyryse demonstrated what it calls the
“world’s first fully autonomous end to end flight” of an FAA-approved
helicopter. The company also unveiled its "flight stack," which it
calls a set of technology that automates helicopter flight and communication
systems, including “smart helipads” able to talk to nearby vehicles in
real-time, detect nearby flying objects and relay local weather conditions.
In a video released by the startup, pilots can be seen releasing the
controls in a modified Robinson R44 as the helicopter flies itself without any
human intervention, the flight controls moving on their own.
“Wherever you tell Luna to fly, she will fly
autonomously…effortlessly…safely,” the video says, referring to the modified
helicopter. “Luna manages flight dynamics more quickly and accurately than a
human.
Skyryse’s technology enables the aircraft to fly autonomously or
“automate aspects of a flight, similar to cruise control for cars, under
high-level guidance from the pilot,” according to the company, with
airline-grade, fail-operational flight control automation. The system has been
tested in airframes other than the R44, according to Skyryse founder and CEO
Mark Groden, though he declined to name any models. Pilots are still relied
upon to communicate with air traffic control.
“Think of it like fly-by-wire, simplified flight control — today, the
helicopter requires, you know, collective, cyclic, pedal input for every
velocity vector you want to achieve,” Groden told Avionics International. “And this totally changes the
control mapping to make it possible for much less experienced people to get
very good flight dynamics out of the aircraft. So the intent isn’t to
autonomize it, it’s automated to make good pilots even better.”
Skyryse is betting its focus on advanced automation systems will enable
it to bring safe urban air mobility to the public at a reasonable cost — even
challenging the economics of commuter cars, which Groden quotes as costing
$0.53 cents per seat-mile. How the company plans to achieve that, however, is
vague for the moment, with more details to be revealed in 2020.
Though today’s reveal is of a fully autonomous helicopter, Groden said
Skyryse doesn’t plan on removing the pilot from the picture anytime soon, but
he does believe the company can see cost savings by enabling a newly-certified
helicopter pilot, with about 250 hours of flight time, to be as safe or safer
than one with many thousands of hours in the air.
“If all we did was make it possible for the 250-hour helicopter pilot
to fly our technology-enabled vehicle and system at the level of safety of the
commercial airline, we will have in large part fixed the problem,” said Groden.
“And if that aircraft can fly much more often on the back of this technology,
and it’s possible to take all these fixed overhead costs — of which there are
many for operating any fleet of aircraft — and amortize those costs over many
more flight hours and many more passenger miles, you can change the cost
structure very significantly.”
Another part of the solution is achieving higher utilization rates.
According to Skyryse’s data, an unmodified R44 can fly 78 percent of calendar
days in the skies above Los Angeles, and the company is “actively figuring out
how to increase our flight uptime. That is one such variable we believe we will
optimize in a repeatable and scalable manner,” Groden said.
Groden boldly predicts that once Skyryse’s fleet of helicopters — which
it plans to operate — his company will “crush the unit economics Uber will ever
be able to touch,” and cars will be used to get to and from Skyryse’s vertical
flight machines. Skyryse declined to say how many R44s it will operate or how
many landing areas it will have access to in LA.
“It’s an interesting claim,” said Richard Aboulafia, vice president of
analysis at the Teal Group. “If I understand it, a $500,000 vehicle that breaks
free of gravity, needs a high level of regulatory scrutiny and also needs a
well-paid pilot, is somehow more economic than a $15,000 vehicle that does what
gravity says, needs minimal inspection, and you can drive yourself. I
suspect the only way that works is with extremely high levels of utilization.”
“Untenable utilization rates are exactly where people usually stumble
in this industry, as we saw 15 years ago with the spectacular flameout of very
light jets and air taxis,” Aboulafia added.
Skyryse is far from the only UAM-focused company betting on
never-before-seen utilization rates, but it’s not yet clear how the company
will achieve its goal — “anyone, anywhere, anytime” — with piloted R44s.
“This is the first piece of technology that we’re unveiling. It’s the
tip of the iceberg,” Groden told Avionics. “You’ll see in
coming months, there will be other big pieces of the technology that will
target other aspects of what drives the costs associated with flying a vertical
flight machine, helicopter or not, that will fundamentally change those unit
economics.”
Urban air mobility will likely have to achieve airline-grade safety,
and Skyryse’s system could play a key role in that. EASA’s special condition for certifying small VTOL aircraft, released
in July 2019, requiring vehicles to match commercial airliners at a
one-in-a-billion chance of catastrophic vehicle failure. FAA has yet to comment
on the safety expectations surrounding eVTOL airframes, but operators will have
to reach a similar benchmark for aerial mass transit to succeed — without
creating unreasonable cost.
“Typically, 80% of helicopter accidents are the result of 'human
factors' -- errors or decisions made by the pilot, maintainers or elsewhere in
the process,” said Mike Hirschberg, executive director of the Vertical Flight
Society. “Increased automation holds the promise to eliminate many of these
errors. In addition, when software makes an error, it can be fixed so that
mistake doesn't happen again, unlike humans who worldwide make the same
mistakes over and over, like deciding to fly into bad weather, for instance.”
“People talk about the additional safety of eVTOL for UAM through
autonomy. Of course, that increase in safety through autonomy can be applied to
helicopters as well.”
Skyryse has raised $38
million from leading investors including Venrock, Eclipse Ventures, Fontinalis,
Stanford University and Bill Ford, the executive chairman of Ford Motor Company
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.