Boeing Cargo Air Vehicle Explained

The Boeing Cargo Air Vehicle is an unmanned, autonomously flying, fully electric cargo air vehicle (CAV). It was made possible by an investment of Boeing HorizonX Ventures.[1]

Development

At the beginning it was remote control-operated. Later it flew autonomously. The first flight tests have been in 2017. The CAV is for research of autonomy technology for aerospace vehicles in the future. In Boeing's Ridley Park wind tunnel flight tests have been finished. It was flying indoor in 2018 before outdoor flights in 2019. With the Boeing CAV there are new possibilities for the transport of time-sensitive and high-value goods and to conduct autonomous missions in remote or dangerous environments.[2] [3] Its configuration evolved to six dual-rotor systems with 12 propellers and the first outdoor flights tests were done by May 2019, including forward flight transition.[4]

By September 2020, Boeing was to close its Boeing NeXt division, in response to financial losses in the wake of the 737 MAX groundings and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on aviation.[5]

Design

The CAV was designed and built by 50 engineers in less than three months.[1] [6]

Similar types

Related developments

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Boeing's Experimental Cargo Drone Is a Heavy Lifter . Alex . Davies . January 14, 2018 . March 19, 2019 . Wired.
  2. News: Boeing Cargo Aerial Vehicle . March 19, 2019 . Electric VTOL News.
  3. News: Boeing Exploring Autonomy, LIDAR in Future Air Cargo Aircraft . Woodrow Bellamy III . July 24, 2018 . March 19, 2019 . aviationtoday.
  4. Watch: Cargo Air Vehicle Completes First Outdoor Flight . May 2, 2019 . Boeing .
  5. News: Boeing NeXt To Close, Raising Doubts over eVTOL Activities . Charles Alcock . September 17, 2020 . AIN online.
  6. News: Boeing Cargo Air Vehicle (CAV) . March 22, 2019 . TRANSPORT UP.