
Airbus Helicopters has unveiled the U145, an autonomous, uncrewed version of its widely used H145 helicopter. The aircraft made its debut this week at the ILA Berlin Air Show, where Airbus displayed a full-scale mock-up of the new platform.Unlike the conventional H145, the U145 has no physical cockpit. Airbus has removed the pilot compartment entirely and redesigned the aircraft around cargo transport and autonomous operations. The helicopter will rely on a specialized sensor suite and artificial intelligence systems to navigate and complete missions without a crew onboard.The U145 is not a clean-sheet design. Instead, Airbus is building on the existing H145 platform, one of the world’s most established light twin-engine helicopters. More than 1,800 H145 aircraft are currently in service globally, with over 8.5 million flight hours logged.Airbus says the aircraft is being developed primarily for high-volume cargo missions. To support that role, the U145 includes an integrated nose-loading door, a foldable loading table, and a dedicated cargo floor. The company also describes the aircraft as a multi-mission platform that could eventually support disaster response, firefighting, surveillance, reconnaissance, and military resupply operations.A first flight with a safety pilot onboard is planned before the end of 2026. Airbus is targeting entry into service at the beginning of the next decade.The announcement reflects a broader trend across aerospace: rather than designing entirely new aircraft, manufacturers are increasingly converting proven vehicles into autonomous systems. Airbus has already followed a similar path with its VSR700 drone helicopter program.For now, the U145 remains a prototype. But if Airbus meets its timeline, one of the world’s most recognizable helicopters may soon be flying cargo missions without a pilot onboard.Is this the first helicopter with a “frunk?”Additional Resources for Inquisitive Minds:Read the press release from AirBus. Airbus introduces uncrewed version of the H145, the U145. June 8, 2026.#autonomousaircraft #uncrewedaerialsystems #fullautonomy #autonomoussystems #robotics #dailyrobotics #robotics #droidsnewsletter This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit droids.substack.com
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