American soldiers have a bevy of hand-launched unmanned aerial vehicles to choose from these days, but nothing quite as nimble, lightweight and cheap as the Stevens Institute of Technology’s unmanned helicopter. The chopper would allow soldiers to check tall buildings for enemies by flying the camera-equipped, remote-controlled helicopter up staircases and into hidden corners before they go in. The four-pound prototype is made of a doughnut-shaped fiberglass shell 18 inches in diameter; inside, two counter-rotating 14-inch rotors create lift.
Right now, the prototype can fly only up to four feet high, though the addition of a small gasoline engine and a few other tweaks should enable it to fly up to 100 feet—high enough to scope out a 10-story building. A single operator can control the whole thing remotely while a 360-degree rotating camera sends real-time video back to a laptop receiver. “This could save lives,” says team member Brandon McWhinnie.
WHAT’S NEXT Because the design was funded by the college, this class will pass the torch on to next year’s team, which will continue to work toward a fully functional product.
Inventors: Christopher Alexander, Brandon MacWhinnie, Michael Manzione, Sonal Pujji and Juan Rodriguez
School: Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N.J.
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from Montreal, Quebec
Cool! This will, hopefully, help save some lives.
- DiGGY
I like the looks of it, another application would be a new class of personal Ariel vehicles.
Dustin H
It was a replicate from the hi-tech tactical gadget in the action movie XXX - State of the Union starring Ice Cube, you can see that gadget on the first 5 minutes of the movie. But this was the real one, I dont know if the one on the movie exists or not. But thats cool because its proven!!!
Awesome, another gadget to help us kill people more efficiently.
It looks like the design has potential, but i have to ask how loud it is, if it's too loud it could alert the enemy to your presence too soon.
This technology already exists!! In fact there are engineering schools around the globe competing with UAV's.
Unmanned Aerial Vehicle competition at Fort Benning, Ga, is the leading competition. Why remote controlled why not a small display and an Autonomous Flight navigating for it's self, Give it 4 years and it will be perfected!