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The Mile High Club for Drones

All moral, ethical, and political quandaries aside, one of the big problems with aerial drones was that, eventually, the things has to land to refuel. Well, drones can now do it in midair. It's like the mile-high club, only with less flesh and more...

All moral, ethical, and political quandaries aside, one of the big problems with aerial drones is that, eventually, the things must land. It’s the age-old problem of refueling—or for smaller unmanned systems, recharging. But that all could be changing. In recent trials headed up by the Department of Defense’s blue-sky research wing, DARPA, two unmanned aircraft were able to cruise close enough to one another to allow for automated refueling.

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The experiments paired two RQ-4 Global Hawk planes, which at the moment are being used almost exclusively for spying. For a good 2.5 hours, and at cruising altitudes of 48,000 feet, the giving-Hawk’s 100-foot fuel probe managed to link up to the receiving-Hawk’s port. As the capstone on a two-year research project, the trial proved incredibly successful.

Read the rest over at Motherboard.