New ‘heavy lifting’ drone gets green light from Transport Canada

A drone that can haul up to 25 pounds as far as 60 kilometres is slated to begin test flights in Canada’s skies this week.

Drone Delivery Canada (DDC) announced Aug. 3 that it’s received a Special Flight Operations Certificate from Transport Canada to begin testing of its Robin X1400 drone. That type of licence is required to operate commercial drones that don’t fall under Canada’s standard drone regulations and is usually granted for specific rural areas that aren’t densely populated.

The Robin drone can deliver cargo in two different ways: It can simply land with the cargo on board, or it can use a tether to lower its payload from as high as 100 feet in the air. With the tether approach, the drone never even has to land before making its return flight.

Toronto-based DDC is the first commercial company to successfully conduct beyond visible line of sight (BVLOS) tests in Canada, having completed them in Foremost, Alta. in June 2016. Earlier this month, the company announced it had recruited former Canada Post CEO Deepak Chopra as a strategic advisor.

Yesterday, the company announced that it will be conducting a pilot project with Public Health Agency of Canada using drone deliveries as a way to improve access for blood-borne infection testing in remote communities. This will involve testing of a climate controlled cargo compartment on the drones.

Drone Delivery Canada also says it’s continuing work on a “Condor” drone that will be able to haul up to 400 pounds.

Here’s a video from the company explaining its depot-to-depot platform approach to getting cargo across the country:

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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Brian Jackson
Brian Jacksonhttp://www.itbusiness.ca/
Former editorial director of IT World Canada. Current research director at Info-Tech

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