What's new

The USAF's new stealth drone changes everything

dexter

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Apr 17, 2009
Messages
6,111
Reaction score
25
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan

The US Air Force’s top-secret unmanned Arial vehicle has successfully completed its first test flight.
The XQ58-A Valkyrie represents a new era of UAVs called ‘Loyal Wingman’ These aircraft are not only limited to previous generation’s capabilities such as recognisance and air-to-ground strikes [explosion] The ‘Loyal Wingman’ drones are designed to accompany a piloted jet into combat [clip from Top Gun] This allows pilots to use the drone to safely scout enemy positions, carry larger payloads or even absorb incoming fire fire.
The Valkyrie also is kitted out with a jet engine, unlike it’s propeller-powered predecessor: the General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper. This means the Valkyrie can fly at an astonishing 625 mph (1,059 kph); with a maximum range estimated at nearly two and a half thousand miles - double the distance of the mq-9.
 
. .
That is one ugly mf. This is what you call a drone.

180605-axe-china-stealth-plane-hero_wst2pg
 
.
Last time their stealth drone was downed , captured and copied by iran
 
. . .
Meet the XQ-58A Valkyrie: The Air Force's New Stealth Wonder Weapon?
March 7, 2019 - David Axe - TNI

FOQtcsG.jpg


The U.S. Air Force in early March 2019 revealed a prototype for stealthy wingman drone that could accompany manned warplanes into combat.

The XQ-58A Valkyrie demonstrator, built by California-based Kratos Unmanned Aerial Systems, flew for the first time over Yuma, Arizona on March 5, 2019, the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio announced.

The XQ-58's first flight signals an expansion of international efforts to develop unmanned aerial vehicles that can fly and fight in mixed formations with traditional, manned warplanes.

Boeing's Australian subsidiary on Feb. 27, 2019 unveiled its so-called "Airpower Teaming System," a 38-foot-long, jet-powered drone that Boeing said could carry weapons and sensors and fly as far as 2,000 miles—all while being more affordable than a $100-million manned jet.

Boeing developed the new drone in cooperation with the Australian military. After further development, the Royal Australian Air Force could acquire the UAV to quickly and cheaply add firepower to its roughly 100-strong fighter fleet and six E-7 radar planes.

"The Boeing Airpower Teaming System is designed to team with a wide range of existing military aircraft from fighters to commercial derivative aircraft," said Ashlee Erwin, a Boeing spokesperson.

"The idea of a robot wingman is that it can keep pace with manned planes, but be tasked out for parts of the mission that you wouldn't send a human teammate to do," Peter W. Singer, author of Wired for War, told The Daily Beast.

Beside Australia, China and Japan also are working on wingman drones. A mock-up or prototype of China's 30-feet-long Dark Sword drone first appeared in public in an undated photo that circulated on-line in mid-2018.

Japan revealed its own "Combat Support Unmanned Aircraft" wingman drone concept in a technology roadmap that Aviation Week first published in late 2016.

Kratos's 28-feet-long XQ-58 is similar to the Boeing Airpower Teaming System UAV in size, shape and concept. AFRL and Kratos are developing the Valkyrie drone under the auspices of the Low-Cost Attritable Aircraft Technology program.

The XQ-58 program aims to “break the escalating cost trajectory of tactically-relevant aircraft,” AFRL stated. “The objectives of the LCAAT initiative include designing and building UAS faster by developing better design tools and maturing and leveraging commercial manufacturing processes to reduce build time and cost.”

The “runway-independent” -- that is, catapult-launched -- Valkyrie “behaved as expected and completed 76 minutes of flight time” on its first sortie, AFRL stated. “The time to first flight took a little over 2.5 years from contract award. The XQ-58A has a total of five planned test flights in two phases with objectives that include evaluating system functionality, aerodynamic performance and launch and recovery systems.”

The implications are huge for U.S. air power. "If you team up a bunch of these aircraft with an F-35 or an F-22 or some of our surveillance assets, you'd basically be able to cover more space at a lower cost point," Bill Baron, manager of the LCAA project, said at a 2017 conference.

Dan Ward, a former U.S. Air Force officer who has written several books about weapons-development, explained all the ways the Pentagon could botch the development of a potentially important new class of drone.

"The most likely way to mess this up is in the beginning of the project," Ward told The National Interest . "If the Pentagon launches a big new program with a start-from-scratch, single-step-to-capability program plan and adopts the usual spare-no-expense, take-your-time mindset ... it'll end up taking longer, costing more and doing less than promised."

"Same thing if they try to pack too much into the system and allow complexity to get out of control," Ward added. The Air Force should experiment with wingman drones, keep them cheap, keep them simple and remind itself that it's not the only country working on this kind of UAV.

Wingman drones are coming. And they could change aerial warfare for any country that acquires them.

Source :. https://nationalinterest.org/blog/b...ie-air-forces-new-stealth-wonder-weapon-46407
 
.
Last time their stealth drone was downed , captured and copied by iran
So? Iranian account is not independently verified. The RQ-170 variant [in question] had a very high penetration rate as it was operating over Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan since 2007, which is impressive to say the least. And RQ-170 have advanced much further as a platform since 2011; new variants are much better.

Secondly, US have developed some of the most capable drones out there which have operated in hostile environments and nobody was able to affect them. Examples include RQ-4 Global Hawk, Avenger (Predator C) and RQ-180. The latter most is the most elusive drone out there.

If advanced drones were so easy to take down then US would have abandoned this spectrum of warfare. Iranians would be idiots to believe that Iranian airspace violations have ceased after 2011, and their defenses cannot be breached.
 
Last edited:
.
this drone is subsonic whereas russia has developed supersonic stealth drone which is far more lethal
So? Iranian account is not independently verified. The RQ-170 variant [in question] had a very high penetration rate as it was operating over Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan since 2007, which is impressive to say the least. And RQ-170 have advanced much further as a platform since 2011; new variants are much better.

Secondly, US have developed some of the most capable drones out there which have operated in hostile environments and nobody was able to affect them. Examples include RQ-4 Global Hawk, Avenger (Predator C) and RQ-180. The latter most is the most elusive drone out there.

If advanced drones were so easy to take down then US would not have abandoned this spectrum of warfare. Iranians would be idiots to believe that Iranian airspace violations have ceased after 2011, and their defenses cannot be breached.
 
. . . . . .
Air Force offers glimpse of new, stealthy combat drone during first flight

REXGA2KHG5AO3G3TWJAZFD7BDU.JPG


The XQ-58A Valkyrie demonstrator, a long-range, high-subsonic unmanned combat air vehicle, completed its inaugural flight Tuesday at Yuma Proving Grounds, in Arizona.

The Air Force’s fleet of current drones, such as the MQ-9 Reaper, are basically giant gas bags that fly — able to loiter for long periods above friendly forces in order to provide armed overwatch and intelligence. But the airspace over future battlefields will likely not be permissive, and so new drones will need to be developed.

XQ-58A Valkyries were developed under the low-cost attritable aircraft technology program — meaning they’re cheap and can be lost in combat without too much concern.

The drone and its derivatives are anticipated to perform a range of missions, from suppression of enemy air defenses, offensive and defensive counter-air maneuvers, nap-of-the-earth or terrain masking flight and high-altitude flying.



HJzPHwy

The Valkyrie appears to come with a stealthy, low radar signature design, meaning it may be able to be paired with the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter in a manned-unmanned configuration.

When entering enemy airspace filled with counter-air systems, the Valkyrie could conceivably soak up enemy fire or even attack enemy positions and aircraft.

The F-35 has been touted by the Air Force chief of staff as the “quarterback of the joint team," and not simply another stealth aircraft. The fifth-generation fighter is expected to come with a suite of information fusion capabilities, enabling its pilot to process information and coordinate on the battlefield like never before.

Valkyrie is the product of a partnership between the Air Force Research Laboratory out of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, and a private firm: Kratos Unmanned Aerial Systems. Kratos has also been involved in the Defense Department’s push for drone swarms under the Gremlin program.

The joint project is part of the Air Force’s effort to “break the escalating cost trajectory of tactically relevant aircraft,” according to an Air Force Research Lab news release.

“XQ-58A is the first example of a class of UAV that is defined by low procurement and operating costs while providing game changing combat capability,” Doug Szczublewski, AFRL’s XQ-58A program manager, said in a statement.

The time to first flight took a little over two and half years from the issuance of the roughly $40 million contract award.

During its first flight, the aircraft behaved normally and flew for 76 minutes, according to AFRL.

Kratos officials said the company has a price target of $3 million per aircraft for orders of less than 99 Valkyries, and $2 million per aircraft for orders of 100 or more, according to a 2016 press release.

An F-35A, which it could be conceivably paired with, is expected to cost roughly $85 million.

The future of manned-unmanned teaming isn’t just about pairing drones and pilots, however.

“It signifies true autonomous machine-to-machine partnering, where manned-unmanned collectives can operate across a broad front at “machine speed” to overwhelm an adversary’s decision-making process," a July 2018 policy paper by the Mitchell Institute reads.

For instance, manned-unmanned developments also include pairing aircraft that are crewed by pilots with uninhabited aircraft that are operated through remote link — as demonstrated by the Air Force’s QF-16 target drone program.

“The service should explore the potential gains that may result from collaborative teaming of manned and unmanned combat aircraft, where attritable numbers of inexpensive RPA complement a limited number of exquisite, but costly aircraft," the Mitchell Institute paper reads.

Mitchell Institute scholars also said that the Air Force Research Laboratory and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency are working towards allowing unmanned aircraft to “execute autonomous actions.”

“This self-directing function would become critically important when manned-unmanned teams operate in contested environments that feature degraded or jammed communications and Global Positioning System (GPS) capabilities—the modes of control used in current RPA operations.”

https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/...ew-stealthy-combat-drone-during-first-flight/


USA in dis hoe!

 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom