Drones are Ready for Takeoff
Will unmanned aerial vehicles—drones—soon take civilian passengers on pilotless flights?
- By Richard Conniff
- Photographs by Robbie McClaran
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
The aeronautical engineer who got the industry started here is a boyish, reclusive character in his mid-50s with the perfect garage-inventor name, Tad McGeer. He runs the Aerovel Corporation, a start-up with nine employees, tucked behind a dense wall of pine trees in the rugged hills above Bingen. The entrance is a narrow gravel driveway with a broken-down gate. A wrecked Cessna sits in a derelict barn, and cars cluster around a big, blocky house at the end of a hayfield.
Inside, a staffer fabricates plane parts in what was once a child’s bedroom, where the electronic controls for a coffin-like industrial oven now sit on a dresser decorated with beetles and snails. Aerovel’s mechanical engineering laboratory occupies another bedroom, with horses and hearts painted on the walls. Test engines roar in the garages at either end of the house, and if it all looks a little makeshift, that suits McGeer just fine.
“Aren’t we all amateurs?” he asks, his voice a low murmur that fades in and out like a distant radio station. “There are a lot of people doing what we do, tinkering in a garage.”
McGeer’s longtime business partner, Andy von Flotow, operates in similar fashion on a farm on the Hood River side of the gorge. But where McGeer tends to be cautious and constrained, von Flotow is about moving obstacles aside and getting business done. He has a gleeful farm boy bearing, with sun-bleached blue eyes and weather-reddened skin. He also has a high regard for calculations scratched on the back of an envelope.
In a pear orchard nearby, von Flotow points out a trailer insulated with five tons of hay. It houses a fan capable of blowing air at 80 miles an hour through a 1,500-foot length of white silage tubing stretched out over a hill. In a meadow on the other side, a cradle built on an old orchard crate is designed to hold a drone running its engine at full speed in the silent wind.
“This is my Mil-14 meadow,” von Flotow says, meaning that it meets military specifications for a sound-testing facility. (In addition to his partnership in Aerovel, von Flotow owns Hood Technology Corporation, which makes launchers, camera turrets and other military gear.) He uses the meadow in the dead of night to test different engine and muffler configurations. In springtime, the raucous calling of frogs in a nearby pond can pose a challenge. “So I phone the sheriff to tell them not to send the police and then I fire a shotgun twice.” That buys him 30 seconds of silence.
McGeer and von Flotow, both Canadians who earned doctorates in aeronautical engineering from Stanford University, have spent much of their careers as seat-of-the-pants inventors, solving problems fast and cheap. Their idea of engineering is making something for a dime that any fool can make for a dollar, and having fun doing it.
McGeer got started in drones working on one of the first civilian models, the Perseus, which made its maiden flight over the Mojave Desert in November 1991. The hole in the ozone layer was a hot issue then, and the idea was that Perseus would take sophisticated measurements of atmospheric chemistry at high altitudes over Antarctica. But McGeer soon split off to develop the Aerosonde, a drone with a ten-foot wingspan that could take routine weather measurements by moving autonomously up and down through the atmosphere. He named the company Insitu, Latin for “in place.” “It would not have been possible to conceive of the idea a few years earlier,” says McGeer, who could take advantage of newly miniaturized technologies, particularly lightweight receivers for the Global Positioning System (GPS).
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Related topics: US Military Scientific Innovation Air Transportation
Additional Sources
"That's Professor Global Hawk" by Kara Platoni, Air & Space magazine, April/May 2011
"U.S. Drone Surveying Japan's Damaged Nuclear Complex" by Nathan Hodge, The Wall Street Journal, March 17, 2011









Comments (10)
2012 was the correct estimate! June 2012, more precisely. That's when our company will be releasing the world's FIRST civilian drone that can be operated from anywhere on the planet. Latency between 400 and 1000 milliseconds.
Posted by Global CS on May 25,2012 | 09:45 AM
a civilian passenger on a pilotless aircraft? of course, why not! but before i go please check the qualification and above all check and recheck the sanity and the personal history of the one holding the joystick......okey, let me go now.
Posted by sasil on April 5,2012 | 08:16 PM
@ Patrick Smith.
You said it all. This type of mythical nonsense needs to stop. She is being disingenuous when she states that it is common for commercial aircraft to be flown in autopilot during the crucial stages of flight (takeoff, climbout, decent and landing). They are typically relegated to monotonous portions of flight such as cruise where waypoint tracking is less a priority for pilots than monitoring engine parameters and aircraft performance. I am currently training to become a flight instructor in Canada and hopefully an airline pilot in the future. Nothing infuriates me more when I here such foolishness regarding the current or future state of automation in the cockpit. Automation is never a substitute for an experienced pilot who has shows good airmanship. One only needs to look at the skills of Sully as he saved his aircraft and passengers from certain death after a dual engine failure just after takeoff. Can a computer make those complex decisions? The simple answer is no.
Look at her on the Colbert Report on July 27, 2011. I was simple stunned.
Posted by Dan Niro on July 27,2011 | 12:22 AM
Robert wrote:
"No mention or credit is given to the Israelis who truly invented the aerial drone in present modern form, having been using the drone since the 1980's."
That is because autonomous aircraft (AKA "Drones") can be traced back to the First World War. Israel did not exist then.
Posted by Duane Brocious on June 23,2011 | 09:30 PM
We really liked the article in Smithsonian. Never new about Insitu being right ht here in Washington State.
Posted by David Clogston on June 19,2011 | 02:14 PM
Regarding the Smithsonian Magazine article, Ready for Takeoff" by Richard Conniff, June 2011 concerning the development of aerial drones...all the examples of performance, scientists, organizations, and universities in the article are North American, either U.S. or Canadian. This gives the impression the drone is an American invention.
No mention or credit is given to the Israelis who truly invented the aerial drone in present modern form, having been using the drone since the 1980's.
ROBERT J. VER MERRIS
Posted by ROBERT J. VER MERRIS on June 16,2011 | 07:58 PM
As a nervous passenger, I would not for a moment consider getting aboard a pilotless aircraft. However, I would not object to having this option as part of an aircraft's redundant safety features.
Posted by Tom Boyles on May 27,2011 | 04:19 PM
Very much thanks to Patrick Smith, www.askthepilot.com, for his educating comments, and for taking the time to post them.
M. Green
Posted by Merilyn Green on May 20,2011 | 10:25 PM
I am a 90 year old retired naval aviator and Industrial engineer who always had a love affair of aviation. The explosion of high tech and power money will concentrate the direction of our efforts in many narrow self serving projets that make no sense for the well being of humans on this small planet. A small example is the consideration of atomic powered aircraft back in the 60s.
I would like to see more efforts made for private civil aviation with a whole new air traffic controlled system. In other words utility should be the major guidelines for R &D.
Posted by Richard C.Poore on May 20,2011 | 07:05 PM
I am an airline pilot and air travel columnist.
Missy Cummings, one of the more widely quoted proponents of the pilotless commercial planes concept, is at it again.
She may have a teaching position at MIT, but once again she proves that she has no idea what she is talking about.
I'm sorry, but a military drone is not a 767, and extrapolating the capabilities of these military machines into a civilian context is fraught with gigantic problems that Cummings chooses to ignore.
Also it reinforces the infuriating and utterly false notion that modern commercial aircraft are already so automated that they basically fly themselves, with the pilots on hand merely as a backup. Perhaps Miss Cummings flew F-18s in the Navy, but she obviously has little or no grasp of what goes on in a commercial airline cockpit.
Even the most "automatic" commercial flight is a very organic thing, subject to innumerable subjective inputs from the crew.
"At some airports today, Cummings notes, Boeing and Airbus jets take off, land and brake to a stop without human hands on the controls."
False. Automatic landings account for less than one percent of all commercial aircraft landings, and even when they are performed they require substantial human input. In many ways an automatic landing is more work-intensive than a manual one. Meanwhile, there is no such thing as an automatic takeoff.
"She predicts that within ten years cargo planes will fly without human pilots and that passenger jets will ultimately follow."
Preposterous on both counts. The idea that within a decade UPS or FedEx will be zipping our packages around in pilotless planes is beyond laughable. Passengers? Not in our lifetime.
Patrick Smith
www.askthepilot.com
Posted by Patrick Smith on May 18,2011 | 07:40 PM