By Jack Nicas, Dow Jones Newswires

Google parent Alphabet Inc. plans this month to use drones to deliver burritos to a small number of staff and students at Virginia Tech, a limited test of the tech giant’s ambitious plans to quicken deliveries with unmanned aircraft.

In the tests, drones from Alphabet’s research lab, X, will ferry burritos from a Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. food truck to an official several hundred feet away, who will distribute the orders to waiting customers, Alphabet said. The flights will mark X’s first drone deliveries in the U.S. to people who aren’t Alphabet employees. Drone-delivery startup Flirtey Inc. delivered medicine to a rural health clinic last year, in another test.

Alphabet said its test will entail a few hundred deliveries to students and staff from a nearby office building. The drones will fly on an automated route over a fenced-off field near Virginia Tech’s campus and remain in sight of an operator who can take control of the aircraft if necessary, Alphabet said.

The test will last for several days at a federally sanctioned drone test site, part of a Federal Aviation Administration program to collect data on drones to improve regulations and technology. The FAA said last month that X would be testing its drones at one of the agency’s six test sites.

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August 30, 2016 Chipotle’s latest ways woo customers: Kids eat free on Sundays, free sodas for students X used drones to deliver dog treats, radios and chocolate to farmers in rural Australia as part of limited tests in 2014. After those tests, X overhauled the design of its drones.

“We want to learn how people feel when they’re receiving a package by air,” X chief Astro Teller said in a blog post Thursday. “Technology is shaped and changed as it makes contact with the real world.”

Teller said X is testing deliveries of prepared food because it poses important delivery challenges, including how to handle busy periods around lunchtime and how to protect the cargo.

“After all, everyone wants their meal hot and in the right shape,” he said. “In future tests, we could add a broader range of items, like drinks, which will push us to handle more weight, keep packages carefully balanced, and manage combinations of items on a single flight.”

He said that X has bigger plans for drone deliveries over the next decade, including potentially delivering medicine and batteries to areas affected by natural disasters.

The FAA didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Alphabet is among several companies eyeing drone deliveries, including Amazon.com Inc. For now, though, new FAA drones rules that took effect last month include restrictions that would preclude large-scale drone deliveries, including a ban on flights beyond sight of operators. Until those rules are changed, which likely will take years, delivery drones in the U.S. will be limited to operating in tests or under waivers.