Vanilla
UAV Claims World Record 8 Day Flight
Vanilla Unmanned demonstrated 8 days, 50 minutes, and 47 seconds of continuous
flight, breaking the world record for unrefueled, internal combustion endurance
of an unmanned aircraft.
Vanilla launched from Rogers Dry Lakebed on Friday, September 24th and
was recovered on Saturday, October 2nd having flown 12,200 miles over Edwards Air
Force Base with a communications relay system & ample ballast to
accommodate other sensors.
The 8 day flight is a step change from Vanilla’s prior record of 5 days
and is without comparison to other UAS. The flight was conducted in
coordination with Edwards Air Force Base and has been submitted for
ratification as an official world record.
The world-record flight was the last in a series of events at Edwards
Air Force Base demonstrating Vanilla’s unique multi-day, multi-sensor
capability. Several sorties over 50 hours each carried two EO/IR cameras,
two satellite communications systems for BVLOS operations, and a
customer-proprietary radar in addition to the mesh radio system.
“Vanilla has changed the definition of endurance. This is a tactical asset with strategic relevance,” says Dr. Dan Edwards, Platform Aerospace CTO. “The notion that tactical UAS must be VTOL and fly for less than 24 hours excludes a disruptive technology that could be fielded today. The value of inexpensive multi-day, multi-sensor coverage is immense.”
Unlike larger long endurance UAS, Vanilla is a tactical-scale Group III
system that uses an internal-combustion engine for propulsion. Its
smaller size enables runway independent launch from forward locations with
minimal manning. Unlike solar-powered high-altitude systems, Vanilla is
immediately responsive to operator tasking and flies at tactical altitudes,
thereby accommodating smaller and lower cost sensors for the same C5ISR
value. Vanilla runs on standard Jet-A fuel, easing logistics concerns
during forward operations.
Vanilla’s airframe can carry up to 150 lbs of sensor payloads across
five internal bays and external mounts, each receiving onboard power and
datalink for sensor C2. A VTOL variant is in production with government
sponsorship and will take flight in early 2022.
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