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News: Why The Air Force Needs A Cheaper Reaper

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厙ぴ勛圖 in the News

厙ぴ勛圖 in the News

News: Why The Air Force Needs A Cheaper Reaper

Last week the Air Force released a request for information for a next-generation drone toreplace the MQ-9 Reaper. The new unmanned aircraft, which should enter service in 2031, will have built-in AI to. However, the Air Force also wants a leap forward in another, more crucial area: cost. Because what theyreallyneed is a cheaper Reaper.

USAF MQ-9 Reaper drone U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO/STAFF SGT. N.B.

is the mainstay of the Air Forces drone force. Launched from air bases close in the theater of operations, it can cruise for,泭by relays of pilots. The Reaper carries afor a close-up view from 10,000 feet, and a mix of Hellfire missiles and laser- and GPS-guided bomb to attack targets. Iranian Quds Force General Soleimani was, showing they are employed against the very highest-value targets.

The problem is the price. In 2008 theyapiece, but the Air Forces latest budget figures shows each. That makes them even more expensive than the pricey, top-endattack helicopter. It is a lot for what is, at heart, supposed to be an expendable drone.

The Reaper or Predator-B, is an upgrade of the originalwhich was retiredby the USAF. This original Predator was designed in the 90s as a low-cost sensor platforms, with a simple airframe and repurposed engine the Rotax powering the Predator and cost around $4m each. This rose to about. At least five were lost in Balkans campaign in the 90s, either to mechanical failure or, but this was considered good value for the intelligence they gathered.

When pilot Scott OGrady wasin 1995, a huge rescue mission was mounted with. When an unmanned Predator was lost, the Air Force simply bombed the wreckage to prevent the enemy gaining intelligence, and wheeled out the next replacement. It barely merited a paragraph in the newspapers. Their expendability, going places too risky for manned aircraft, made drones useful.

Things changed when the Predator was replaced by Predator B. The Reaper is twice as fast as the original and carries five times the payload, making it more like a traditional Air Force plane宇hough it has less endurance thanwhich was arguably the rationale for a drone loitering above enemy territory.

The price inflation from $4m to $7m to 14m to the current $32m is no great surprise. Increased performance always has a disproportionate effect on cost, and continual upgrades mean continual price hikes. Military aircraft are notorious for following. These are a set of semi-satirical observations formulated by a defense industry procurement executive in the 1980s that predict that by 2054 the Air Force and Navy will only be able to afford a single aircraft between them.

But that $32m price tag means that the Reaper could not be bought in large numbers. It also means the Reaper is not as expendable as the Predator, and losses cannot not be ignored.

For years Reapers operated with relative impunity over Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, butby Houthi rebels last year. Reapers operate at medium altitude; other planes stay safe by flying at extreme altitude like the, or by keeping down in the weeds. At medium altitude an aircraft is liable to be seen and shot at, and while Reaper operations generally avoid defended airspace, as events in Yemen show, some losses are to be expected.

General Atomics, maker of the Predator and Reaper, rolled out the, a sleek, stealthy version of the drone designed to cope with air defenses. However, the Avenger had reduced endurance and payload and likely increased cost, and the Air Force were clearly not convinced,泭In 2012 the Air Force effectivelyfor an MQ-9 Reaper replacement, known as MQ-X, in favor of Reaper upgrades. However, this February, the Air Force announced it was.

The Air Forces newrequest for informationaims to find out about potential replacements, to carry out the Hunter-Killer ISR [Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance] Mission at medium altitude. This specifies a need for a reduced lifecycle cost and mentions the need for Attritable Technology in other words, drones they can afford to lose.

Even before the new request, the Air Force was looking at low-cost commercial drones to fill the gap. Not everyone has the militarys millions for drone acquisition, and there are a variety of MALE (Medium Altitude, long Endurance) drones that might be adapted to their needs.

We also see a lot of opportunity to bring in commercial technology, push the price point down, have systems that … we can take more loss with.” Dr. Will Roper, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, technology and logistics,泭.

They will be looking in particular at modern drones likeTEROSmade by NavMar. This is in the same weight class as the original Predator, with an endurance of 23 hours, and carries a 600-pound payload. It is designed for rapid servicing and autonomous flight operations with minimal ground crew. It exploits the use of a proven airframe and off-the-shelf commercial components rather than the custom-made electronics of military drones. TEROS successfully completed, and it builds on NavMars long experience with the smallerTigerShark dronesupplied to the U.S. Navy (supplied atm each).

TEROS Unmanned Aircraft NAVMAR APPLIED SCIENCES CORPORATION

Drones like TEROS carry less than the Reapers 3,800-pound payload, but it is doubtful whether the mission still needs that sort of weight. Thedeveloped for the Predator was an amazing feat of miniaturization in the late 90s, cramming a high-resolution ground surveillance radarinto just 120 pounds. More recent developments have seen this type of synthetic aperture radarSimilarly, the hefty, 100-poundmissile is overkill, causing too much collateral damage for many missions, hence the development of a bizarre non-explosivewith pop-out sword blades for some targets. Something like the five-poundSwitchBlade precision munition, well proven in Afghanistan and elsewhere against vehicles and individuals, might be an effective lightweight alternative.

The Predator, originally little more than a powered glider with a camera, morphed into something closer to a standard Air Force plane in terms of performance and cost making it hopeless for the mission it was supposed to perform. Perhaps, given a clean sheet, the Air Force will succeed in procuring a smarter, high-tech, low-cost, long-endurance drone it can buy in large numbers and afford to lose, a cheaper Reaper to get the job done.

I’m a South London-based technology journalist, consultant and author