Technology

How Hummingbird Works

A patented airborne charging system that keeps drones in continuous flight.

The Charging Cycle

Contact-Based Power Transfer

Hummingbird uses a simple yet powerful concept: when a drone touches a conductive charging node, regulated DC power flows into the drone’s onboard receiver. This power feeds both the propulsion system and the battery, enabling rapid mid-mission recharging without landing.


Components Explained

Charging Node

Mounted on poles, barns, towers, or vehicles. Provides high-efficiency, regulated DC power through durable conductive surfaces.

Receiver Module

A lightweight onboard assembly that receives power and routes it safely into the battery and propulsion bus.

Control Electronics

Current limiting, voltage regulation, reverse-flow protection, thermal monitoring, and failsafes maintain safe, controlled charging.

Distributed Mesh *Future Capability

Charging nodes can be networked to create intelligent routes for autonomous drones.


Reliability & Safety

Engineered for Harsh Conditions

  • Regulated DC power with adjustable current limits
  • Short-circuit and reverse-current protection
  • Safe charging even with minor hover drift
  • Works in wind, dust, and outdoor environments
  • Durable coatings and conductive surfaces for long service life

Why This Matters

This Is the Missing Infrastructure for High-Volume Drone Operations

Drones can now perform long-range missions, multi-hour surveys, and continuous patrols without ever returning for battery swaps. Hummingbird unlocks the operational scale required for a true aerial logistics ecosystem.