Guinness World Record set for longest hurricane drone flight

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has set three world records for its drone hurricane hunter.  In September 2022, NOAA researchers flew a 27-pound unmanned drone into the eye of Hurricane Ian, a Category 5 storm that was just off the coast of Florida.

The drone was able to fly for 102 minutes in the hurricane, the longest drone flight ever recorded in a hurricane.

It also communicated with the researchers’ aircraft over a distance of 130 nautical miles, the longest communication distance ever recorded with a drone.

The drone observed wind speeds of 216 mph at an altitude of 2,100 feet, the fastest wind speed ever observed by a drone.

“We were shook so hard and so violently that we had to make sure the integrity of the crewed aircraft was there, so we left the storm,” said Joseph Cione, a member of the flight crew and the lead meteorologist for Emerging Technologies at NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory in Miami, Florida.

The drone deployed from the belly of a P-3 NOAA plane and expanded its eight-foot wide wingspan so it could remain in the eyewall of the storm and send critical information back to the plane.

The drones can take more of a risk flying close to the ocean where conditions are often too dangerous for crewed planes.

This information will help NOAA scientists to better understand hurricanes and improve their forecasting models.

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