An assembly plant that will produce Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) will be operating at Lakeland Linder Regional Airport near Tampa.
GRIFF Aviation North America’s component supplier, GRIFF Aviation of Alesund, Norway, has constructed a prototype that lifts hundreds of pounds and the company is working on a larger unit that will carry nearly a ton. In the beginning the assembly plant in Florida will build around six drones a week for distribution throughout North America. Plans are already in place to increase that capacity as needed.
To accommodate the demands of the American industrial, agricultural and military marketplace, the company will produce four basic airframes to which they can attach up to 20 different accessory packages in order to meet a particular mission for a purchaser. Flight times can run from 20 to 45 minutes depending on payload weight though flight times can be extended for over an hour with added battery packs and a lesser payload, and with a 500-foot electronic tether it can stay aloft indefinitely.
The global consumer drone industry is expected to climb to a value of nearly $4 billion over the next ten years. Given that drone technology has numerous commercial, industrial, and military applications (the defense drone market is already worth around $8 billion), the future for drone growth looks bright. It is anticipated that in the U.S., the FAA will be announcing changes in the regulation of all drones weighing over 55 pounds and used commercially. Presumably this will open the floodgates for companies currently awaiting the green light from the authorities.
Most U.S. heavy lift drones only lift between 5 and 80 pounds so the GRIFF UAVs are being hailed as gamechangers. “The commercial heavy-lift drone is the next worldwide technology explosion once regulations can be worked out governing the industry,” says Leif Holand, GRIFF’s (Norway) CEO. “It’s inevitable and we feel that the U.S. market will lead the demand. The craft will be entirely assembled in the U.S. from technology and components supplied by GRIFF Aviation in Norway.”
GRIFF’s plan is to produce 5 basic airframes around which it will construct 20 or so different applications depending on the mission described by the purchaser. Examples are construction, movie production, agriculture, search and rescue, law enforcement, civil services, fire services, cargo delivery, man overboard rescues, and of course, the military and defense industries. Imagine being able to deliver desperately needed ammunition and supplies to US forces in a firefight, even evacuating wounded soldiers.
With safety the number one concern of the world’s aviation authorities, the GRIFF line will offer a ballistic parachute that deploys in milliseconds in the event of any kind of problem.