Verizon Testing Drones For Cell Service

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Key Takeaways:

  • Verizon is testing drones to provide emergency cellphone service in areas where terrestrial coverage has been lost due to natural disasters.
  • These 200-pound drones carry femtocell equipment, are gasoline-powered, and can fly for 12 to 16 hours at altitudes of 3000 feet and below.
  • The tests, ongoing since 2016, aim to quickly deploy focused cell coverage and were recently conducted in Cape May, New Jersey, with a manned aircraft escort.
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As airborne drones find ever more applications, Verizon is testing unmanned aircraft to provide cellphone service after a natural disaster. The 200-pound drones are being used in the latest in a series of tests Verizon has been conducting since 2016, according to USA Today.

The aircraft, which carry equipment called a femtocell, can be deployed quickly to provide focused cell coverage to an area that has lost terrestrial coverage because of storms, fires or other damage. The drones are capable of flight times between 12 and 16 hours and are powered by a 3 -HP gasoline engine driving a tractor prop. They’re designed to fly at 3000 feet and below.

Verizon has been testing the latest version of this technology at Cape May, New Jersey. The drone was escorted by a manned aircraft to assure separation from other aircraft.

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