The drone has become a popular tool for food delivery, but it’s also been used to catch fire. In the past year, there have been several incidents in which drones have crashed into powerlines and caught fire. In one case, a drone crashed into a power line in Oregon and caught on fire. In another case, a drone crashed into a power line in Texas and caught on fire. The drones are often used for deliveries of food, but they can also be used for other purposes. The crashes into powerlines are likely because the drones are not properly secured and they can fly too close to the wires. The fires are likely because the drones were using too much electricity and they started to heat up from the flames.
A food delivery drone operated by Alphabet subsidiary Wing crashed into powerlines in Brisbane, Australia on Thursday, catching fire and falling to the ground, which probably overcooked the food. Alphabet is the parent company of Google.
The incident prompted energy firm Energex to shut down the network for a reason they never thought they’d have to, leaving about 2,000 customers without power for 45 minutes and another 300 customers without power for three hours.
“The meal was still hot inside the drone’s delivery box when the crew got there,” Energex spokesman Danny Donald told ABC Radio Brisbane.
The company claims this is a rare phenomenon, and at the moment, that appears to be the case. Drones seem no more a threat to powerlines than kites, shoes, birds, falling trees, paper airplanes, and whatever else is thrown at them.
“Fifteen years ago, we asked people to be careful if they were giving their children kites for Christmas and where they were flying them,” Donald told ABC. “Now we’re asking parents to be very careful with where their kids fly their drones.”
Wing began operating in 2019 and delivers food and medicine to customers using autonomous flying drones, having carried out around 250,000 deliveries. They recently expanded to the U.S.
Since it wasn’t delivered in 30 minutes or less, there’s been no word yet on whether the customer got their food for free.
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