Facebook Drone Failure Prompts a U.S. InvestigationOn top of the imperfect drone flight, it lost a satellite to SpaceX's Falcon 9 explosion on September 1st.

ByJon Fingas

This story originally appeared onEngadget

彭博通过Engadget

Facebook may have been beaming with pride when itcompleted the first full testof its Aquila internet drone on June 28, but that "structural failure" near the end? U.S. officials aren't so happy about that.

The National Transportation Safety Board hasrevealedthat it's investigating the incident, which it considers "substantial" enough to be treated as an accident. The exact circumstances aren't available, but there wasn't any damage on the ground.

In a statement toBloomberg, Facebook重申,这是“快乐”test flight, which checked everything from basic aerodynamics to controls. There were "no major unexpected results," the social network says. It likely wasn't catastrophic, then, but the NTSB's involvement still raises eyebrows. Is it investigating just to be cautious, or is this more than a small snag?

Whatever the situation, it's only going to add to Facebook's headaches as it tries to offer free, far-reaching internet access. On top of the imperfect drone flight, itlost a satelliteto SpaceX's Falcon 9 explosion on Sept. 1. Both ventures are inherently risky -- Aquila is effectively a barebones solar-powered wing -- but we suspect that Facebook wasn't expecting to run into that much trouble in a relatively short time.

Jon Fingas is an associate editor at Engadget.

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