Well, you can in conventionally powered aircraft. The V-22 Osprey, a VTOL tiltrotor has a ferry range of almost 4,000 km, and an operational range over 2000 km.
However, it gets difficult with electrically powered aircraft, although recent developments with
"solid state" batteries could see some advances.
https://www.topspeed.com/everything...ame-changing-solid-state-battery-breakthrough
"Keiji Kaita, the president of Toyota's research and development center for carbon neutrality, told Financial Times that Toyota is now capable of producing a solid-state battery that can deliver a mind-blowing range of 745 miles (1200 km), and astonishingly, it can be fully charged in 10 minutes or even less. And Set aside the impressive range for a second, and consider the freakishly fast charging time, which is only slightly longer than it takes to grab a takeaway coffee. This is five minutes faster than the current quickest-charging 2023 Lucid Air. Looking to the future, Toyota has set its sights on integrating these advanced solid-state batteries into its EV lineup by 2027."
Solid state batteries have between 2 and 2½ times the energy density of Lithium Ion batteries
https://www.flashbattery.tech/en/how-solid-state-batteries-work/
This allows them to be lighter for the same power, or the same weight for a greater power. They also have a significantly shorter charge time, and because they have a solid rather than a liquid electrolyte, they do not have the propensity to explode or catch fire. In terms of electric aircraft this translates directly to increased range, less down time and better safety.