Fun with planes, parafoils and robots

SnowflakeFigA.jpgSnowflake is a collaboration between Naval Postgraduate School and University of Alabama at Huntsville to develop single and multiple autonomously guided parafoils. The project, described in detail here, uses an Arcturus T-20 UAV to launch the parafoils and a Surveyor SVS-based robot with Inertia Labs Renegade base to autonomously locate the parafoils after landing.

We had the opportunity last week to view Snowflake field tests at CIRPAS McMillan Airfield. The Arcturus launched a pair of Snowflake parafoils from 3500-ft, and upon touchdown, the Snowflake controller transmitted GPS coordinates that were relayed to the robot. The robot then autonomously moved to the transmitted coordinates using a script written in picoC. We witnessed 3 successful UAV launch and robot retrieval cycles. Future tests will include drop of a smaller version of the Surveyor robot by parafoil.

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Arcturus ready to launch. Note underwing pod carrying the parafoil.

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Parafoil approaching the ground

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Robot receives parafoil GPS coordinates

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Robot driving through the grass to reach parafoil

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Arcturus approaching touchdown

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Comments

  • It always seemed to me this would be the ideal way to deliver the rescue payload for the Outback Challenge, no power for the parafoil, but a controlled landing to a gps target.
  • Gary - probably landing on the runway because it was there. The pilot put the plane down on the center line every time, but the skid plate made a lot of noise.
  • Powered parafoils are the way to go for portability. The problem is control & wind.
  • Moderator
    Why landing on the runway and not the grass??
  • cool !!!!!
This reply was deleted.