LONDON — A twin-engine transport drone has landed on the deck of a British aircraft carrier in what the Royal Navy said is a primary for the service.
The drone, dubbed HCMC, flew on and off the deck of the HMS Prince of Wales during a trial near the coast of Cornwall, southwest England, the Royal Navy announced Sept. 7.
The drone, developed by British company W Autonomous Systems, flew for about 20 minutes from an airfield at Predannack to then touch down safely on the carrier’s deck.
After unloading a small payload from drone, it took off again and returned to Predannack.
The Royal Navy said in its statement that the aim of program is to “deploy drones with a UK Carrier Strike Group in the longer term, using them to transfer stores and supplies — akin to mail or spare parts — between ships, without the necessity to launch helicopters.”
“It’s an important step along the method to operating crewless aircraft safely alongside F-35 Lightning jets and naval Merlin and Wildcat helicopters that are currently the backbone of the Fleet Air Arm,” the statement explained.
The dual-boom, twin-engine drone is able to delivering payloads weighing as much as 100 kilograms (220 kilos) with a maximum range of 1,000 kilometers (621 miles). The aircraft incorporates an autopilot system developed by British company Distributed Avionics, which eliminates the necessity for trained individuals to remotely control it.
The exercise wasn’t the primary time a drone operated from the HMS Prince of Wales, with previous experiments including small quadcopters and the Banshee goal drone; the latter launches by catapult and use parachutes to land.
Nonetheless, the Royal Navy said the newest trials were in a “different league,” involving a bigger, more capable uncrewed aircraft than anything previously tried.
The trials took place because the ship departed U.K. waters for an event off the East Coast of the US happening over the subsequent few months involving drills with F-35 fighters, Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, and the General Atomic-made Mojave drone.
The HMS Prince of Wales was scheduled deploy this time last yr, but suffered a propeller shaft failure soon after leaving its base in Portsmouth.
The HCMC drone trial is considered one of a series of experimental and operational drone programs with the Royal Navy, including a take care of Leonardo to develop an unmanned helicopter demonstrator and the acquisition of Schiebel’s Camcopter S-100 for surveillance missions.
Andrew Chuter is the UK correspondent for Defense News.