Aircraft

K-Max Titan: The first commercial heavy-lift helicopter with no pilot

K-Max Titan: The first commercial heavy-lift helicopter with no pilot
The K-Max Titan becomes the world's first unmanned heavy-lift helicopter for commercial use
The K-Max Titan becomes the world's first unmanned heavy-lift helicopter for commercial use
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The K-Max Titan becomes the world's first unmanned heavy-lift helicopter for commercial use
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The K-Max Titan becomes the world's first unmanned heavy-lift helicopter for commercial use
The K-Max can now carry 6,000 pound loads without a pilot on board
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The K-Max can now carry 6,000 pound loads without a pilot on board

For about a decade now, Kaman's K-Max intermeshing rotor helicopter has been flying unmanned cargo missions for US forces in Afghanistan. Now, the K-Max Titan is becoming the world's first heavy-lift unmanned helicopter for the commercial market, having taken its first flight last week.

The K-Max is a heavy hauler in the sky, starting life back in 1994 as a logging helicopter and carrying up to 6,000 lb (2,722 kg) of cargo on the end of a cable and cargo hook. Its design is all about efficient lift; instead of a tail rotor, it rocks two large top rotors side by side, each counteracting the other's torque, timed to miss each other as they spin like the blades of an egg beater. The small cabin seats one, and it's designed to automate as much as possible, so the pilot can keep their hands and feet on the controls at all times.

Crew requirements are minimum – one pilot, one mechanic – but with the Titan system in place, you won't even be needing the former. Unmanned operations can keep pilots out of danger in risky environments, like firefighting situations, difficult locations and poor weather. They can keep the chopper in the air longer, running repetitive routes at all hours, and it stands to reason there's money to be saved on personnel costs as well.

“We are excited to reach this major milestone on K-MAX TITAN™," said Roger Wassmuth, Senior Director of Business Development for Kaman's Air Vehicles division. "Watching this capability take to the skies and knowing that we are going to solve some of the toughest challenges for our commercial and military customers.”

With more than a thousand unmanned missions flown in military deployment, Kaman's system is certainly well-tested. The US Marine Corps, for its part, is looking to push its two K-Max choppers further, adding the ability to operate fully autonomously with the addition of a sensor-based self-piloting suite from Near Earth Autonomy. Testing on that platform is expected to start in the next couple of months.

The Titan system will be available as a retrofit for existing K-Max choppers, or as an option on new ones. Machines like this will eventually be replaced by heavy-lift autonomous electric drones, but it's going to be a long time before zero-emissions multicopters are capable of matching the K-Max's 1,150-mile (1,850-km) range figure. Check out a video of the military version below.

K-MAX Helicopter Unmanned Aerial System

Source: Kaman Aerosystems

5 comments
5 comments
BlueOak
Wow, been flying unmanned for the Marines delivering supplies for 10 years and never heard of it!

Cool tech and obviously well-proven.
Username
I would like to see a performance comparison between this layout and the stacked twin rotors.
nick101
These have been hauling high-value timber in the pacific northwest for ages, they are amazing. Less noisy, way less maintenance, and more capacity.
Catweazle
The most intriguing thing about the Kaman helicopters is the extraordinarily simple - hence cheap - and highly efficient rotor head technology.
I wonder why other helicopter manufacturers don't use this highly advanced technology, after all, it has been in use since the Korean war.
Eddy
I wonder how they compare in lift with the Edison Sky Crane.