Russia Debuted First Postal Drone and It Promptly Crashed in to a Wall

Russia Debuted First Postal Drone and It Promptly Crashed in to a Wall

Drones are being gently integrated in to all areas, with photography being just one successful use. Amazon were one of the first to publicly discuss using them for delivering, but Russia launched its first postal drone today to a small public gathering; it did not go well.

For us photographers and videographers, drones have left behind the notion of being an expensive, niche luxury and are now somewhat of an industry staple. However, the very same drones that are hoisting around our cameras are also being re-purposed for other commercial uses. One of the most popularly proposed ideas is that of having drones as automated delivery devices, swiftly and accurately dropping off our packages without needing to navigate traffic. It always seemed a bit of an idyllic concept to me, with its useful reality being some way off on the horizon, but Russia wanted to prove that's not the case.

In a little bit of a shock unveiling, Russia launched their first postal delivery drone and a crowd gathered to enjoy its maiden voyage. This anticipated first flight was far from smooth, as the small audience got to look on as the little propelled robot flew straight in to a wall before plummeting to the ground in more separate pieces than it left as.

The unmanned drone was on its merry way to deliver a package to a nearby village to prove the worth and readiness of the technology to the Russian Postal Service, who separated themselves from the incident nearly as quickly as the crash happened, stating they were there as a guest.

Rob Baggs's picture

Robert K Baggs is a professional portrait and commercial photographer, educator, and consultant from England. Robert has a First-Class degree in Philosophy and a Master's by Research. In 2015 Robert's work on plagiarism in photography was published as part of several universities' photography degree syllabuses.

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11 Comments

Nice!!!!

Hey Robert K Baggs , how did you come to "this drone was piloted" watching this video? )))

I wrote this not long after it happened and the reports were conflicting/confusing, but now there's a little more info, I've updated the article.

I can't see this taking off, excuse the pun. :) If an incompetent pilot doesn't destroy it, kids will throw rocks at it.

Exactly!!!

Let's just hope their ICBM program is just as successful...

Patiently waiting for "In Russia..." jokes on this.

In Soviet Russia...drone flies you!!! (Sorry, my GPS was in Yakov Smirnoff mode for a minute there.)

UAV delivery will never happen. There are too many obstacles to avoid and too many other things that will keep it from being financially viable. Too many power/telephone/cable lines, too many instances of not being able to fly because of wind, rain, or snow, too many thieves and miscreants willing to take it out with a rock or stick. Any UAV with enough range would be large enough to create a lot of damage. You'll always need a delivery service in place for heavy items, so it's not like they can cut that out and save a lot of money by not having delivery trucks.

It's a matter of time and money. There are plenty of places in rural areas where running truck routes must basically be a money losing business. As you point out weather will be an issue - but it will probably just reinforce a multi-tier delivery model (express, guaranteed, drone, etc.)