Skip to main content

Check out Wing’s largest delivery drone yet

Introducing an additional aircraft to complement our existing fleet | Wing drone delivery ?
Promotional image for Tech For Change. Person standing on solar panel looking at sunset.
This story is part of Tech for Change: an ongoing series in which we shine a spotlight on positive uses of technology, and showcase how they're helping to make the world a better place.

Drone delivery has yet to materialize in the way many had been expecting, with numerous autonomous flying machines zipping over city streets carrying packages to customers, but Wing is one company that’s as determined as ever to make it happen.

Recommended Videos

The Alphabet-backed enterprise has been steadily and quietly testing its flying machines and delivery systems for several years now, slowly gaining the confidence of regulators to let its machines fly further and more autonomously between base and delivery addresses.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

In another expansion of its work, Wing on Wednesday announced plans to add a bigger drone to its fleet that it says will “simplify and streamline larger orders.”

In other words, where some orders by a single customer had previously required two aircraft, or two trips, to complete, the new larger aircraft will be able to do it in a single flight.

In an online post unveiling the new drone, Wing CEO Adam Woodworth explained how his team has created a so-called “Aircraft Library,” which works on a variety of configurations that can be quickly adapted whenever it identifies a need in the market, like a bigger drone for larger orders.

“It’s always been our vision to implement a multimodal drone delivery model, in the same way that ground delivery uses different vehicle sizes for different orders,” Woodworth said, adding: “With the new aircraft carrying more food, medicine, and household essentials, customers in urban and suburban areas will be able to bundle their orders better — and receive them in one quick trip.”

Center: Wing's newest delivery drone.
Center: Wing’s newest delivery drone. Wing

As with Wing’s existing fleet, the new aircraft has a round-trip range of 12 miles (19 km) and can cruise at a speed of around 65 mph (105 kph). But its standard cardboard delivery box can handle consignments of up to 5 pounds (2.3 kg) — twice that of its smaller machines.

The new delivery drone will join Wing’s fleet in the next 12 months, the CEO said.

Wing has so far used its drones to complete around 350,000 deliveries to customers’ homes in carefully selected locations across three continents. As part of its efforts to develop and test its platform, the company partnered with Walmart last year to launch a drone delivery service in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, flying items from two Walmart Supercenters to customers who placed orders using a mobile app. The goal is to reach delivery addresses within just 30 minutes of the order’s placement.

Wing says its drones “essentially fly themselves.” In other words, they’re highly autonomous but are monitored by remote human operators to ensure that the flight and delivery proceed without any problems.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon starts drone delivery trials in California and Texas
Amazon's delivery drone carrying a package.

Amazon has launched drone delivery trials in a couple of new locations in California and Texas.

David Carbon, vice president of Prime Air Amazon, announced the development on LinkedIn. His post included a photo (below) showing one of its drones carrying a small box on the end of a tether.

Read more
Drone show mishap sees flying machines drop out of the sky
A drone show over Perth, Australia,

A drone show in Perth, Australia, didn’t quite go according to plan after a number of the flying machines fell out of the sky and crashed into the water during the performance.

Sunday night’s “City of Light” event took place in front of thousands of onlookers, but as the show proceeded, LED-laden drones could be seen dropping from the display after malfunctioning.

Read more
Drone delivery leader Wing heads to new country for next pilot program
A Wing delivery drone in flight.

Residents of a small town in Ireland will soon be able to receive deliveries by drone after Wing announced it was launching a pilot program there.

The drone delivery specialist is already running pilots in Brisbane and Canberra in Australia, Helsinki in Finland, and several locations in the U.S., and in the coming weeks it will launch a "small-scale" effort in Lusk, 10 miles north of Dublin.

Read more