The first fully autonomous flight.
The first fully autonomous flight.
Souce
While much of the world debates how to train pilots and adapt regulations for flying cars, Chinese engineers chose a radically different path: eliminating the pilot entirely. EHang has established itself as a global leader in autonomous aerial mobility with the EH216-S—the first electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) vehicle to secure all necessary certifications for mass production and commercial operations—and the most impressive feature is that there is no one at the controls.
Reaching this stage, however, required a grueling marathon of testing; over the course of three years, the aircraft was subjected to simulated cyberattacks, deliberate GPS signal loss, and extreme weather scenarios. Engineers put the EHang through its paces in high winds, intense heat, sub-zero temperatures, and even situations involving intentionally induced mechanical failures. In some tests, four of the 16 motors were shut down simultaneously mid-flight; yet, algorithms redistributed power to the remaining rotors in fractions of a second, keeping the aircraft stable.
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