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On Wed, 09 May 2007 20:41:48 -0700, Richard Riley
wrote in : On Wed, 09 May 2007 20:36:27 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote: So it would seem that Boeing is predicting the worldwide airline fleet to double within the next 20 years. Is there any wonder that Boeing is pushing for ATC modernization? Imagine the NAS with twice as many airliners in flight at any given time. Clearly that is not possible with the current technology and infrastructure. And with UAVs poised to start filling the NAS with freight haulers, the NAS is going to become even more congested well before 20 years hence. UAV freight haulers? In the NAS? Not in our lifetimes. Pilots are cheap by comparison. You may be correct, but some UAV experts seem to disagree. "Package delivery/freight" is listed as a suitable civil use of UAVs by Sara Waddington (as published in Unmanned Vehicles magazine Business Analysis Forecast December 2002): http://www.uavworld.com/_private/reports/civil.htm And LocMart is apparently developing a cargo UAV: http://www.anyfreight.com/snews/index.php?id=2437 Lockheed Martin and Kaman will develop an UAV cargo helicopter Washington, USA - The United States signed a contract of 3.5 billions dollar with the two industries ... Past year the first K-MAX unmanned prototype successfully passed a 12 hours test without refueling round New England using the autopilot utilizing only a pre-tracked course and his on-board navigation system. The helicopter will be 6 meters and it's weight will be 6000 pounds, its ceiling altitude should round 15.000 feet. ... (024) 070509134959-1073418 (World Aeronautical Press Agency - 2007-05-09 01:49 pm) And overseas: http://www.caa.co.uk/docs/7/DAP_ORA_...tter_May05.pdf Once a technological solution to the ‘sense and avoid’ requirement becomes available (and it will in a few years), a demand for civilian and military UAVs will probably quickly emerge. Civilian applications could include police and fire service surveillance, passenger and freight, coastal surveillance/patrol, agricultural and geographic survey, power and pipeline inspections, mobile phone and broadband relay etc. and as such will involve operations in all classes of airspace. Upon what credible information do you base your prognostication? [...] Ummm... artificially make something rare, the price goes up. I'm not suggesting anything artificial be created. You've got to agree, that NAS airspace is a finite resource. As such, there is doubtless an amount of air traffic beyond which it could be said that its capacity has been exceeded. Given that today there are some ~5,000(?) flights aloft at any given moment, what might the maximum number be? |
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