Drones

Amphibious drone performs belly landings on the water

Amphibious drone performs belly landings on the water
The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone can make belly landings on the water, or parachute down to the ground
The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone can make belly landings on the water, or parachute down to the ground
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The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone has a control range of over 30 km (19 miles), and will automatically return to its launch point if it loses radio contact
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The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone has a control range of over 30 km (19 miles), and will automatically return to its launch point if it loses radio contact
Launched by hand from the shore or a boat, the fully-waterproof Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone is able to remain airborne for up to two hours on one charge of its battery pack
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Launched by hand from the shore or a boat, the fully-waterproof Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone is able to remain airborne for up to two hours on one charge of its battery pack
The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone can make belly landings on the water, or parachute down to the ground
3/3
The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone can make belly landings on the water, or parachute down to the ground
View gallery - 3 images

Ordinarily, after they've finished flying in a grid pattern over a given area, fixed-wing mapping drones either just perform a traditional landing on the ground, or they parachute down to it. However, what if they're being used over the water? Well, that's where Aeromao's new Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone comes in.

Launched by hand from the shore or a boat, the fully-waterproof Talon Amphibious is able to remain airborne for up to two hours on one charge of its battery pack, flying either autonomously or by remote control. It has a control range of over 30 km (19 miles), and will automatically return to its launch point if it loses radio contact.

As it flies, it uses a downward-facing camera to capture 20-megapixel stills or 4K/30fps video of the sea/lake/coastline below. Real-time video is transmitted to the user over a distance of 15 to 20 km (9 to 12 miles), or up to 40 km (25 miles) if an optional parabolic antenna is used.

Buyers may also opt for a forward-facing camera that can be remotely panned, and that can lock on items of interest.

The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone has a control range of over 30 km (19 miles), and will automatically return to its launch point if it loses radio contact
The Aeromapper Talon Amphibious drone has a control range of over 30 km (19 miles), and will automatically return to its launch point if it loses radio contact

Once the drone's aerial observation task is complete, it can autonomously perform a belly landing on the water – according to the company, it is the only such product to be able to do so. Parachute landings on dry land are also possible.

The drone itself has a 2-meter (6.6-ft) wingspan, weighs 3.6 kg (7.9 lb), has a maximum speed of over 85 km/h (53 mph) and is made from carbon fiber-reinforced EPO (expanded polyolefin) foam. It can be seen in action, in the video below.

Source: Aeromao

Aeromapper Talon Amphibious sneak preview

View gallery - 3 images
4 comments
4 comments
Username
Wouldn't it make a lot more sense to have land back on the ship?
Leonard Foster Jr
Now if it could act as a submarine, Then return to flight that would be something
WB
I dont get it..every half a$s drone or glider with a motor has a return to home feature or return to base station (if that moves). How is this special or useful...
MichaelReed
Yeah but how much does it cost ??