Natilus Explained

Natilus
Type:Private
Industry:Aerospace industry
Products:Cargo aircraft design
Founders:Aleksey Matyushev
Anatoly Starikov
Foundation:2016
Location:San Diego, California

Natilus is a San Diego-based aerospace company developing next-generation blended-wing-body cargo aircraft.

History

Natilus was founded in April 2016[1] by Aleksey Matyushev and Anatoly Starikov. The idea for Natilus was sparked after their industrial design firm experienced challenges getting product out of Asia, leading them to the realization that cargo shipping is inexpensive but slow, while air freight is timely but expensive. The company was originally based in the San Francisco Bay Area and the original prototype was a seaplane.[2] In 2021 the company relocated to San Diego, California to access aerospace engineering talent and a world-class wind tunnel facility.[3]

Market

Natilus targets an existing $197 billion global air cargo market, projected to grow beyond $210 billion by 2027,[4] and the potential to tap into the $2.2 trillion global cargo shipping market, projected to reach $4.2 trillion by 2031.[5]

Aircraft

The craft would carry in freight containers and unit load devices.It would be towed from sea ports outside of territorial waters, mostly at from shorelines, to takeoff within in a sea state swell up to .It would fly across the Pacific Ocean in 30 hours at, well below passenger air traffic and would be towed to a seaport after landing.Made of carbon fibre and fibreglass composites, its production cost is estimated at $25 million, much lower than jetliners due to fewer onboard systems and no pilots, it would be powered by jet engines developed by Pratt & Whitney.

The 2020 carbon-fiber full-scale long turboprop drone design is simple without a cockpit, landing gear, or pressurization and would taxi into port remotely controlled at about .[6] Landing gear room is left for future use in the wide large drone.[7] Natilus aims to ship from Los Angeles to Shanghai in 30h for $130,000 at $3 per gallon of jet fuel, while a Boeing 747 takes 11h for $260,000 and a cargo ship takes 504 hours for $61,000 [8]

Development

A wingspan scale model will test the autopilot and water take-off and landing.In July 2015, it was targeted to fly within 18 months before a full scale aircraft three years later.[9]

Natilus raised $750,000 of venture capital from Tim Draper and was incubated at the aviation-oriented Starburst Accelerator in Los Angeles.Natilus hopes to fly its prototype, comparable in size and weight with a Predator drone, between Los Angeles and Hawaii on 30-hour test runs, carrying up to of cargo.The over full-scale drone would be finished by 2020 to be flight tested and certified before commercial flights.[10]

A launch customer wants an long cargo with a capacity for 2019, to fly the Los Angeles to Hawaii route, before a long craft with a capacity would fly between the U.S. and China by 2020.[6] About 70% complete in May 2017, the prototype seaplane will lack a landing gear, its maximum gross weight is, its wingspan is and it will cruise at .[7]

In August 2017, smaller cargo-drones were envisioned, with large cargo doors and designed for a dimensional weight.[11]

In November 2017, Natilus closed a second round of seed funding from Starburst Ventures, Seraph Group, Gelt VC, Outpost Capital and Draper Associates.Using existing turbofan and turboprop engines, a drone with a retractable landing gear would carry over between local regional airports; the payload craft would weight for trans-Pacific routes.[12]

The 2-tonne payload freighter would have a blended wing body configuration.[13] In December 2017, water-taxiing of the wide prototype was going to be tested in San Francisco Bay, before flight testing in 2018 and the capable freighter by 2020.[14]

In February 2018, the, -span prototype was being prepared for flight from San Pablo Bay, north of San Francisco, powered by a single Rotax 912 piston.The next aircraft will be a blended wing body (BWB) landplane, providing 30% more volume.The first product will be a small regional freighter powered by a Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A with a cargo capacity and a MTOW, to fly in 2020 and to be certified under the FAR Part 23 within 3.5 years from February 2018.[15]

As of March 2023 the projected product range consisted of three variants, all BWB freighters: Kona, a pusher twin-turboprop capable of carrying 3.8t payload over 900nmi, Alisio, a turbofan capable of 60t over 4140nmi, and Nordes capable of 100t over 5400nmi. The company reported that Ameriflight has "agreed to purchase" 20 Konas, and that total agreements cover 460 aircraft valued at over $6.8 billion. The aircraft will have an autopilot, with a ground-based human pilot able to control up to three vehicles.[16]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bloodworth . Donald . 2024-01-23 . Natilus Designing Solutions for Air Cargo . 2024-01-25 . San Diego Business Journal . en-US.
  2. Web site: Smith . Phillip . 2018-03-16 . This Leviathan Could Disrupt Unmanned Global Air Freight: Natilus CEO Aleksey Matyushev . 2024-01-24 . dronebelow.com . en-US.
  3. Web site: Bloodworth . Donald . 2024-01-23 . Natilus Designing Solutions for Air Cargo . 2024-01-24 . San Diego Business Journal . en-US.
  4. Web site: Global air freight market size forecast 2027 . 2024-01-23 . Statista . en.
  5. Web site: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com . Allied Market Research . Cargo Shipping Market Size, Share, Revenue, Analysis, Outlook . 2024-01-23 . Allied Market Research . en.
  6. News: Mary Grady . March 28, 2017 . Startup Envisions Transoceanic Cargo Drones . AVweb.
  7. News: Ed Darack . May 10, 2017 . Meet Natilus, the Jumbo Drone . . A small startup aims to capture some of the huge global shipping business.
  8. Web site: Natilus.
  9. News: Seaplane cargo drone offers free insurance . Rob Coppinger . Jul 15, 2015 . Air Cargo Week.
  10. News: A Startup's Plan To Cut Air Freight Costs In Half With 777-Size Drones . Mar 27, 2017 . In 2020, Natilus’s huge unmanned planes could carry 200,000 pounds of goods across the world. But first, a 30-foot prototype must pass test runs . Daniel Terdiman . Fast Company.
  11. News: Natilus to build smaller e-commerce cargo drone . Lewis King . August 4, 2017 . Air Cargo World.
  12. As Autonomous Technology Transforms the Global Freight Sector, Natilus Attracts More Seed Investment from Starburst Ventures, Seraph Group, Gelt VC, Outpost Capital and Draper Associates . Large cargo-capacity drone poised to challenge incumbents on price and scale as it prepares for first flight test . . Nov 13, 2017.
  13. News: Natilus cargo drone closes second round of seed funding . Lewis . King . November 13, 2017 . Air Cargo World.
  14. News: Cargo Industry Tests Seaplane Drones to Deliver Freight . Startup Natilus’s prototype aims to complete its first water trials, with flight tests to follow . 27 Dec 2017 . Jeremy Hsu . IEEE Spectrum.
  15. News: Unmanned Cargo Aircraft Head Toward Flight Tests . Feb 2, 2018 . Graham Warwick . Aviation Week & Space Technology.
  16. Hemmerdinger . Jon . Future freight . Flight International . March 2023 . 200 . 5779 . 39.