The  Urban Aeronautics Company is rounding out preparations for the coming  demonstration of its UAV “Air Mule” before the IDF high command. “Air  Mule” is designed to transport supplies to fighting forces and medevac  troops from fire-saturated battlefields. This outstanding aerial vehicle  is unmanned but capable of transporting humans.  Development  began in 2007, and it its maiden flight was held in 2009. Since then  “Air Mule” has performed several hovering flights, accumulating  approximately forty flying hours. The next tests will have it flying at  60 to 100 knots without a ground-based connecting cable (as required  until now by the Israeli Civil Aviation Authority). The Defense Ministry  is financing half the outlay of “Air Mule”’s operational technologies.  Next year Urban Aeronautics will look for a strategic partner, local or  foreign, in order to complete the project and commence industrial  production. 
 The  systems are being developed in close cooperation with the air force’s  chief medical officer and ground forces command. If the IDF confirms its  procurement, “Air Mule” is expected to be operational in 2015. 
 Although  Urban Aeronautics’ initial ideas for a UAV were civilian in nature  (flights over congested urban transportation systems), after publication  of plans to equip the US marines with UAVs capable of transporting  humans, the company’s directors decided to concentrate their efforts on  the military arena. 
   Dr.  Rafi Yoeli, company CEO and the guiding light behind the initiative,  believes that this type of UAV will be able to fly to designated  locations; navigate by means of a pre-fed computerized flight program  and GPS systems; and land independently. Supplies will be unloaded at  the landing site for troops waiting for the UAV. Wounded can be  harnessed to special compartments on the sides of the vehicle and then  “launched” to an evacuation point. 
   The  “Air mule” is compact: six meters long and two meters wide. Its  Turbomeca Ariel jet engine drives two internally enclosed propellers  that vertically lift the vehicle and cargo. Employing more than 200  flaps, the UAV’s flight path can be precisely controlled. Urban  Aeronautics is developing a number of UAVs that operate on the principle  of internally installed propellers. In addition to “Air Mule”, other  models include Centaur, designed to carry three to five passengers  without a pilot, and X-Hawk, a two-engine model intended to transport  five to eight passengers. 
   “We’re  now able to land and take off from any point”, says Dr. Yoeli. “For the  first time this lets us evacuate wounded from almost anywhere. Our UAV,  carries a gross weight of close to 400 kilos”. Besides civilian and  military uses, Dr. Yoeli notes the wide range of other missions where  UAVs will prove invaluable: flying above dangerous zones such as nuclear  reactors and areas contaminated by chemical plant leaks. 
   Urban  Aeronautics is in contact with the United States Army and the  militaries of other nations, including India and Italy, for possible  sale of the “Air Mule”. 
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