Joby completes 150+ mile air taxi test
fligh
Santa Cruz,
California-based Joby Aero Inc. has achieved an important milestone in the
development of its all-electric air taxi for commercial passenger service
by flying a full-size prototype vehicle more than 150 miles on a single
charge, including a vertical take-off and landing.
The flight was
completed at Joby’s Electric Flight Base in Big Sur, California, as part of
the company’s ongoing flight test campaign. The aircraft, piloted from the
ground by Joby’s Chief Test Pilot Justin Paines, took off vertically before
transitioning to forward flight and completing 11 laps of a predefined
circuit. After more than 1 hour and 17 minutes in the air, the aircraft
landed vertically, having covered a total distance of 154.6 statute miles.
JoeBen Bevirt,
founder and CEO of Joby, said, “We’ve achieved something that many thought
impossible with today’s battery technology.
Joby’s prototype
aircraft uses commercially available lithium-ion batteries that have been
adapted for aerospace use. An 811 NMC cathode and a graphite anode cell
were selected, following internal testing, to deliver the optimal trade-off
between the specific energy required to fly the aircraft 150 miles, the
specific power to take-off and land vertically, and the cycle life to
deliver an affordable service. Joby researchers demonstrated in the lab
that this battery is capable of more than 10,000 of our expected nominal
flight cycles.
The team developing
Joby’s energy system is led by Jon Wagner, head of powertrain and
electronics, who previously led battery engineering at Tesla.
Paines, a former
Royal Air Force test pilot who helped develop the controls for the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter before joining Joby as its chief test pilot, added, “Achieving
this milestone is an important validation of our technology and I’m
incredibly proud to have played a small part in what is, to our knowledge,
the longest all-electric eVTOL [electric vertical take-off and landing]
flight performed to date.”
Joby plans to start
commercial passenger service in 2024, transporting a pilot and four
passengers at speeds of up to 200mph.
The company is
working toward certifying its aircraft with the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), having already agreed on a G-1 certification basis
and been awarded a US Air Force Airworthiness Approval.
The FAA requires a
Part 135 Air Carrier Certificate for Joby to operate its aircraft as an air
taxi service in cities and communities around the United States. Alongside
a Type Certificate and Production Certificate, this is one of three
regulatory approvals critical to the planned launch of Joby’s all-electric
aerial ridesharing service in 2024.
The company is now
in the first of five stages necessary for Joby to achieve Part 135
certification in 2022.
In February 2021,
Joby announced its intention to merge with Reinvent Technology Partners
(RTP), a special-purpose acquisition company. RTP has scheduled an
Extraordinary General Meeting of Shareholders for Aug. 5, 2021, to vote on
the approval and adoption of RTP’s business combination with Joby.
SkyGrid and NASA Collaborate to Accelerate
Deployment of Advanced Air Mobility
For years we have
been talking about adding unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and air taxis or
advanced air mobility (AAM) to the national airspace (NAS) but there are a
few constraints that prevent these two nascent technologies to join their
manned counterparts over controlled airspace. One of these restrictions is
the fact that we cannot operate these unmanned vehicles in our skies by
adding their management to the current air traffic control (ATC)
infrastructure. Unmanned aircraft, especially UAVs, will have to have an
independent unmanned traffic management (UTM) system and will coordinate
with ATC but will not be dependent on it.
Since 2018, SkyGrid,
a joint venture between SparkCognition and Boeing, has developed and
deployed UTM technology that aims to accelerate the massive acceptance of
unmanned platforms in the NAS. Last week, SkyGrid announced it has been
selected to participate in the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA)’s Advanced Air Mobility National Campaign.
SkyGrid is one of
only a handful of private enterprises and institutions that have been
selected for a Space Act Agreement to work with NASA to define and develop
the future of AAM. SkyGrid is scheduled to participate in National
Campaign-1 (NC-1) by developing future airspace system capabilities based
on its AerialOS platform. NC-1 will include flight demonstrations and
simulations at test sites around the country over several months in
2022.
In order to obtain
more details about the announcement we reached out to Zehra Akbar, Vice
President, Strategy & Operations at SkyGrid, for an exclusive interview
about their technology and the reasons for NASA’s selection.
“For two years now,
SkyGrid, the joint venture between between Boeing and SparkCognition, has
aimed at enabling a smarter airspace management system in order to fill
gaps unaccounted for in conventional UTM solutions” Zehra explained. “Unless
we figure out how to integrate unmanned platforms into an already crowded
airspace without involving (ATC) the promise of drones and air taxis is
never going to materialize.”
NASA, the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA), academia and the private sector are actively
engaged in the issue of traffic management in the NAS in order to
facilitate the incorporation of unmanned vehicles, but most approaches are
using technologies that do not give the regulator the confidence for
autonomous operations.
“Our approach is
unique, using artificial intelligence (AI) and Blockchain, we are working
to produce a truly effective traffic management system that would allow for
conventional operations without adding workload to existing ATC,” Zehra
said. “SkyGrid is now bound to collaborate with NASA addressing pressing
safety and integration challenges necessary in the development of aviation
markets for passengers and cargo.”
Most UTM companies
today are exploring the use of ADS-B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance
& Broadcasting) and many other existing technologies to accelerate
acceptance. SkyGrid’s approach is different by focusing on inflight
deconfliction through the use of AI, in addition to ADS-B. SkyGrid is also
in partnership with Raytheon.
“We are focused on
developing solutions that will reduce the burden on human operators for
day-to-day operations of these non-traditional aircraft. That is critical
to creating an ecosystem that can scale,” Zehra said. “We have been talking
a crawl-walk-run approach to testing UAM solutions and given our success,
we can safely say that the day is approaching when these platforms will be
mainstream.”
“In order to achieve
this goal, SkyGrid is focusing on critical operational challenges such as
inflight strategic deconfliction, interoperability among non-traditional
vehicles, trajectory planning and urban infrastructure,” Zehra concluded.
“Only by cohesively addressing the numerous pieces of the UAM puzzle will
we be able to tackle the incredibly complex task of mixing manned and
unmanned aviation over controlled airspace.”
It is encouraging to
see how these collaborations between government agencies and private
companies, are advancing the cause of the full deployment of these unmanned
vehicles that will eventually become part of our daily lives.
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