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Leonardo SW-4 Solo helicopter flies for 45 minutes with no pilot aboard

Test is the first unmanned flight of the 'optionally piloted' helicopter

Leonardo's SW-4 Solo single-engine optionally piloted helicopter flies for the first time with no safety pilot on board, February 27, 2018. Image: AgustaWestland/Twitter

Leonardo announced on Tuesday that it carried out the first flight of its SW-4 Solo single-engine optionally piloted helicopter, flying for 45 minutes with no safety pilot on board.

Tests of the Solo Rotary Unmanned Air System/Optionally Piloted Helicopter included “remote engine start up and shut down with ground run, automatic take-off and landing, hovering OGE (Out of Ground Effect) and acceleration to forward flight, automatic way point navigation to and from the area of operation and simulation of a surveillance mission,” the company said in a press release.

The helicopter reached an altitude of 1,500 feet (457 meters) and a speed of 60 knots (111 km/h) during the flight at Taranto-Grottaglie Airport in southern Italy.

The Solo RUAS/OPH is derived from Leonardo’s SW-4 helicopter, manufactured in Poland, and is designed to operate with or without a pilot. Tests with a pilot on board have been conduced since December 2016, but Tuesday’s test was the first solo flight.

Leonardo markets the SW-4 Solo for civil government, military and maritime use. When piloted, it can be used for personnel transport and cargo re-supply as well as surveillance, battlefield activities and intervention. Its maritime applications include intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, targeting, anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare support, and mine countermeasures.

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