The U.S. Air Force has evaluated MightyFly’s Cento cargo drone for various logistics roles under an SBIR Phase II contract as part of the Afwerx research and development program. On June 27, the company reported that it conducted a live flight demonstration with the autonomously operated aircraft on May 8 at New Jerusalem Airport in California.
According to MightyFly, the trials involved “a Department of Defense-relevant mission” that demonstrated the Cento’s autonomous flight capability, as well as the company’s patented Autonomous Load Mastering System (ALMS). This technology handles all aspects of cargo loading, onboard package management, and balance management.
During the demonstration, the Cento, which has a payload of 100 pounds, carried a pair of large boxes between two points. The ALMS autonomously positioned and secured the boxes in the cargo compartment before closing the nose cone prior to takeoff. After landing, the packages were ejected from the aircraft without human intervention before departure to another location.
MightyFly is developing a family of cargo drones with payloads ranging from 100 to 500 pounds. In addition to military use cases, it is looking to support various medical and logistics applications. It has been testing the Cento in an FAA-approved airspace test site since March 2024. Around the same time, the company received the FAA's approval for a flight corridor between New Jerusalem and Byron airports, but will not use this until it has acheived a transition flight with the Cento, which is anticipated later this year.
According to Fernanda Sausen, MightFly's senior director of business development, the company anticipates being ready to start the proof-of-concept phase of the program in the near term. She said it is working to achieve a phased roll-out of commercial operations for the aircraft as various regulatory milestones are reached.