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First Ever: FAA Approves Drone That Flies Solo, With No Pilot and No Ground Observer

By: Isradrone Editorial Team⏱️ 3 min read
לראשונה: FAA מאשרת רחפן שטס לבד, בלי פיילוט וגם בלי צופה בשטח

On January 14, 2021, the FAA approved American Robotics to operate its Scout drone in fully autonomous flights with no one present on site, a first-of-its-kind breakthrough in the BVLOS flight space. The approval is limited to specific rural areas, flight altitudes below 400 feet, and a maximum takeoff weight of 20 pounds.

The approval that redefines BVLOS

Until now, any company wanting to fly a drone beyond the visual line of sight of a human operator was required to station live observers on the ground to monitor the airspace and flag approaching aircraft or obstacles. That requirement made large-scale deployment economically unfeasible, since every site needed dedicated staff hired and stationed permanently. The FAA has now broken through that barrier for the first time by dropping the human-observer requirement from the approval granted to American Robotics.

The new approval is not a blanket one. It is explicitly limited by a number of technical and operational conditions designed to keep risk low at this early stage.

  • Approval date: January 14, 2021
  • Type of operation: fully autonomous flights with no human operator on site
  • Operating area: designated rural areas only
  • Altitude ceiling: below 400 feet
  • Maximum takeoff weight: 20 pounds

How exactly does the Scout system work in the field?

American Robotics' system is built around a fixed base station that manages the entire flight cycle without any need for human intervention. The drone takes off, flies a pre-programmed survey or inspection route, and returns to the base station to recharge. Between flights, it requires no human presence on the ground to monitor it.

The technology that makes this possible is called acoustic detect-and-avoid, a system that identifies other aircraft based on sound signals and lets the drone maintain a safe distance from them in real time, without relying on human eyesight or a transponder on the other aircraft.

  • Operation: fully autonomous from a fixed base on site
  • Frequency: multiple survey flights per day, following a pre-programmed route
  • Imaging type: very high-resolution imaging
  • Detection of other aircraft: acoustic detect-and-avoid system
  • Charging: automatic return to base between flights

What does this mean for the industry?

The history of American drone regulation is known for being slow and cautious. The FAA typically prefers gradual expansion of permissions backed by accumulated safety data, rather than a one-time revolution. The approval for American Robotics doesn't open the skies to every operator, but it does create a legal and operational precedent that other companies seeking similar approvals can learn from.

Open questions remain. The restriction to rural areas and a 20-pound weight limit means this isn't yet a solution for urban deliveries or heavier industrial drones. The cost of installing a fixed base at each site, along with the individual approval process each company will have to go through separately, is also still unclear, and will ultimately determine how quickly this model gets adopted beyond a single company.

This is an achievement that shows how investment in autonomous detect-and-avoid technology can shift a regulator's stance, and credit is due to the entrepreneurs who drove this development to the point where the FAA agreed, for the first time, to drop the human-observer requirement.

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Isradrone Editorial Team

The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.

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