Boston Herald

Facebook’s internet drone flying high after successful test flight

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YUMA, Ariz. — A solarpower­ed drone backed by Facebook that could one day provide worldwide internet access has quietly completed a test flight in Arizona after an earlier attempt ended with a crash landing.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s long-term plan for the drone, called Aquila, is to have it and others provide internet access to 4 billion people around the world who currently do not have it.

“When Aquila is ready, it will be a fleet of solarpower­ed planes that will beam internet connectivi­ty across the world,” he wrote Thursday on Facebook.

The drone’s second flight was completed in May at Yuma Proving Ground, The Yuma Sun reported.

The drone flew with more sensors, new spoilers and a horizontal propeller stopping system to help it better land after the crash in December. It was in the air for an hour and 46 minutes and elevated 3,000 feet.

The drone flew with the engineerin­g team watching a live stream from a helicopter chasing the drone, said Martin Luis Gomez, Facebook’s director of aeronautic­al platforms.

The team was thrilled with the outcome, Gomez said.

“The improvemen­ts we implemente­d based on Aquila’s performanc­e during its first test flight made a significan­t difference in this flight,” he said.

The drone weighs about 1,000 pounds and has a longer wingspan than a Boeing 747.

The drone runs mostly on autopilot, but there are manned ground crews to manage certain maneuvers.

“We successful­ly gathered a lot of data to help us optimize Aquila’s efficiency,” Zuckerberg said. “No one has ever built an unmanned airplane that will fly for months at a time, so we need to tune every detail to get this right.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? STATUS UPDATE: Mark Zuckerberg reaffirmed his plans for his Aquila internet drone last week.
AP FILE PHOTO STATUS UPDATE: Mark Zuckerberg reaffirmed his plans for his Aquila internet drone last week.

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