Parachute Validation: An Unlikely New Step On the Road to Drone Delivery

Home / Articles / External Non-Government

zdnet_flytex_drone_rescue_systems_parachute_test

July 24, 2019 | Originally published by Date Line: July 24 on

Here”s a scenario for you: It”s ten years in the future and you”re walking down the street when a delivery drone malfunctions while toting a five-pound package. The high-pitched whine overhead changes octaves, you look up, and it”s clear this hurdling projectile is going down.

Unfortunately, it”s a scenario that”s bound to play out. As commercial drones become more of a reality, there”s increasing and urgent awareness of the problem of drone safety. It”s a multi-dimensional challenge involving air traffic management, communications protocols, and a thousand other difficult realities of sending unmanned objects through the air many thousands of times without significant safety issues. But the biggest single concern is that these things could plunk out of the sky and injure or kill unsuspecting pedestrians.

Software can help mitigate crashes with emergency landing measures, and commercial drones are often equipped with superfluous props for redundancy. But the enduring safety technology of choice for commercial drones is one that hails from the 1700s: the parachute.

As the commercial drone industry is struggling against patchwork international regulation, a few organizations have cropped up to provide validation for the industry. One of those called Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research (NUAIR) is a New York-based nonprofit coalition of private and public entities. Among other consulting and testing, it provides validation for drone parachute systems.

“When it comes to commercial drone operations, safety has to be a main priority,” said Yariv Bash, CEO and co-founder of Flytrex, which just received a coveted validation from NUAIR after strenuous testing. “We chose to work with Drone Rescue Systems [DRS] not only because they are the experts when it comes to keeping drones safely above our heads, but also because we share the same vision of making commercial drones a viable option by upholding the highest safety standards. Our confidence in these tests is bolstered by NUAIR”s strong track record, having managed the testing of the world”s first certified parachute recovery system. NUAIR is at the forefront of safety regulation, and we”re pleased to be testing with an experienced and capable partner.”

By providing testing, NUAIR is hoping to give the drone sector the data and standards needed to unlock commercial operations. It”s also hoping to become a primary validation service when commercial drone delivery does take off in the United States, which most experts believe is a matter of when not if.

Related Links

Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research (NUAIR)

Drone Rescue Systems (DRS)

Flytrex