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Insitu Introduces 'Inceptor' Small Unmanned Aircraft System

Designed To Support Public Safety With Real-Time Video, Stable Images

A small unmanned aircraft system (UAS) called "Inceptor" was unveiled Thursday by Insitu, a subsidiary of Boeing. The aircraft is designed to provide the public safety market with real-time video and stable, high-resolution imagery.

Inceptor's compact size fits in the trunk of a car and is easy to launch and recover in almost any environment, according to the company. It is "highly tolerant of sustained winds and wind gusts, achieving stable aerial imagery through an advanced onboard control system."

"Inceptor will help first responders locate and identify natural and human public safety threats, keeping people out of harm's way," said Insitu Vice President of Sales and Marketing Ryan Hartman. "We're excited to add a small rotorcraft to our family of field-proven unmanned systems."

Hartman says operator training and workload is minimized through a streamlined design and user interface. Video imagery is transmitted to the handheld ground control station and distributed to decision makers for real-time viewing. "Inceptor fits seamlessly into public safety operations," said Hartman. "It is simple, efficient and effective. We can provide our customers extensive, experienced support because we've been providing ISR services for more than seven years."

One person can carry and operate a complete system reliably and safely in adverse weather conditions, providing instant imagery anytime an aerial vantage point is needed. The rotorcraft weighs less than four pounds, hovers quietly overhead for more than 20 minutes and can patrol at speeds up to 24 mph. The operator uses a small portable control unit to command it to hover or fly in any direction at varying speeds.

FMI: www.insitu.com

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