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Wing Aviation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subsidiary of Alphabet Inc.
Wing Aviation LLC
Wing
Company typeSubsidiary
Industry
  • Aviation
  • logistics
Founded
  • 2012; 14 years ago (2012) (as a project of X Development)
  • July 2018; 7 years ago (July 2018) (as Wing)
HeadquartersMountain View, California, U.S.
Number of locations
5
Area served
  • United States
  • Australia
  • Finland
  • Ireland
Key people
Adam Woodworth (CEO)
ServicesDrone delivery
ParentAlphabet Inc.
Websitewing.com

Wing Aviation LLC,doing business asWing, is a subsidiary ofAlphabet Inc. that develops adrone delivery system andUTM systems. The company completed its first deliveries in 2014.[1] The company has operations inAustralia, theUnited States,Finland, andIreland, with potential expansion to theUnited Kingdom planned.[2][3][4][5][6] In July 2018, Project Wing graduated fromX Development (formally Google X) to become an independent Alphabet company.[7] As of January 2019, Wing began delivering take-out food and beverages out of its test facility inBonython, Australia, as part of a pilot program.[8] In April 2019 Wing became the first drone delivery company to receive anair operator's certificate from theFederal Aviation Administration to allow it to operate as an airline in the US.[9] In the first quarter of 2022, the service made more than 50,000 deliveries.[10]

Drone specification

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Wing's aircraft delivering goods inVuosaari, Helsinki

In the six years to 2018, Wing developed its aircraft to meet compliance standards and effectively deliver parcels through the air. The drones are specifically designed for small parcel delivery. Each aircraft has horizontally-oriented propellers like a classicmultirotor drone, along with afixed-wing to help it cover long distances quickly The aircraft takes off vertically and then enters a forward-flight phase. Its motors are powered by electric batteries.[11] For safety purposes, the aircraft features many redundant systems (extra propellers, batteries, etc.) so that if anything were to malfunction, flight can continue until a mechanic can address the issue. Theflight path the aircraft follows is determined by Wing's UTM (Unmanned Traffic Management) System, which optimizes the route for time and distance efficiency while ensuring the plane's path will be obstacle-free. To assist in navigating unforeseen obstacles, the aircraft is equipped with black and white cameras that detect and analyze shapes without observing distinct features in order to preserve community privacy while maintaining safe flight. The company says that image data is not preserved, and is only used for ‘technical analysis’.[12][13]

In 2022, the company introduced concepts for new models that could carry larger and smaller payloads.[14]

Objections and opposition

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Wing's public operations have faced noise complaints.[15][16] Residents in the rural southeastern region of Australia where Wing operates have complained about the disruption to their lives. A local dog club president said that the noise from the delivery drone trials spooked dogs when nearby.[15] Some customers opted out of the trial citing this disruption.[15] One ecologist states they worry these "drones are taking to the air without a lot of thought for the ears of people on the ground."[13] In November 2019, the Australian Federal government found Wing'sCanberra operation exceeded the residential noise standard.[17] Wing developed a quieterpropeller and promised other measures to address this issue.[17]

In an experiment inBonython, a suburb of Canberra, drones suddenly appeared, surprising and annoying residents. There were complaints about the drones' impact on the community, local wildlife and the environment. There were unplanned landings, dropped payloads, drones flying close to vehicle traffic, and birds attacking and forcing down some drones. Residents joined together, usingFacebook and aWeb site, produced newsletters, lobbied federal and local MPs, informed local, national and internationalnews media, and made manyfreedom of information requests to local authorities.[18][19]

In response to complaints a parliamentary inquiry into drone delivery systems was set up, with remit including examination of the decision to permit the trials, the economic impact of the technology, what regulatory oversight there was of the technology at various levels of government, and possible environmental impact of drone deliveries. In August 2023 Wing terminated operations in the Canberra area with little fanfare, because it had "shifted [its] operating model".[18][19]

References

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  1. ^"Wing".Google X. RetrievedApril 15, 2019.
  2. ^"Helsinki - Finland".Wing. Retrieved2020-06-28.
  3. ^"Canberra – Australia".Wing. Retrieved2020-06-28.
  4. ^"Virginia – United States".Wing. Retrieved2020-06-28.
  5. ^"Alphabet drone firm lifts off in Dublin".Independent.ie. 2022-11-16. Retrieved2023-10-27.
  6. ^"Wing Blog: Wing and Apian partner to create medical drone delivery service in Ireland and explore opportunities in the UK".Wing Blog. Archived fromthe original on 2023-10-27. Retrieved2023-10-27.
  7. ^Koulopoulos, Thomas (July 2018)."The Moonshot to Create the Next Google".Inc. RetrievedJuly 13, 2018.
  8. ^"Google Drones Can Already Deliver You Coffee In Australia".The Wall Street Journal. 8 January 2018. Retrieved13 January 2018 – via YouTube.
  9. ^Chappell, Bill (23 April 2019)."FAA Certifies Google's Wing Drone Delivery Company To Operate As An Airline".NPR.org. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  10. ^"Alphabet's drone delivery division Wing flies high with 50k deliveries in Q1".The Stack. 2022-04-27. Retrieved2022-06-14.
  11. ^Launch: Transforming Delivery by Wing CEO James Ryan Burgess (Video with introduction and transcript).Slush. 7 December 2018 – via YouTube.
  12. ^"Google Spinoff's Drone Delivery Business First to Get FAA Approval".Bloomberg. 22 April 2019. Retrieved24 April 2019 – via www.bloomberg.com.
  13. ^ab"Google drones approved for US home deliveries".BBC News. 23 April 2019. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  14. ^"Wing Blog: Wing's Aircraft Library".Wing Blog. Archived fromthe original on 2022-12-27. Retrieved2022-12-27.
  15. ^abcWiggers, Kyle (27 December 2018)."Customers compare the noise from Alphabet spinout Wing's delivery drones to a chainsaw".Gizmodo. Retrieved25 October 2020.
  16. ^Paine, Garth (3 May 2019)."Drones to deliver incessant buzzing noise, and packages".The Conversation.
  17. ^abGothe-Snape, Jackson (11 September 2019)."Google-affiliated drone delivery service found to be exceeding noise limits".ABC News. Retrieved25 October 2020.
  18. ^abZenz, Anna; Powles, Julia (2024)."Resisting technological inevitability: Google Wing's delivery drones and the fight for our skies".Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A.382 (2285).Bibcode:2024RSPTA.38240107Z.doi:10.1098/rsta.2024.0107.PMC 11558236.PMID 39533913.SSRN 4866385. In press; date written 22 June 2024
  19. ^abNaughton, John (10 August 2024)."Don't trust the inevitability myth touted by the tech determinists".The Observer.

External links

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