Sjekk first flight her: https://tinyurl.com/s9c44f6
Watch DARPA's Air-Launched And Air-Recovered "Gremlins" Drone Take Its First Flight
Just last
April, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) selected its team for the final phase of its reusable air-launched and recovered
Gremlins drone program. Now DARPA is laying out exactly how the final concept
will work and what it aims to prove with flight testing in an awesome new
explainer video complete with high-end animation of the final Gremlins
configuration in action.
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The $32M
contract will support the program and its flight testing between 2018 and 2020,
after which time DARPA sees the concept moving into an operational state. The
team that won the tender is led by Dynetics, with Williams International, Moog,
Sierra Nevada Corporation, Systems Engineering, Inc., and its previous
competitor for the contract, Kratos, acting as subcontractors on the program.
The concept and its many affiliated technologies
are widely viewed as a gateway to a new revolution in air combat—one that could
become very lucrative to the players involved with Gremlins as its all but
guaranteed that the USAF will rush the capability into an operational state
once DARPA's involvement in the program winds-down.
The video
highlights the cooperative swarm concept behind Gremlins. This includes the
ability to readily adapt each vehicle to carry different payloads (up to
150lbs), and once networked together they will equal more than the sum of their
parts. Secure line-of-sight data-link communications and a level of autonomy
that allows the swarm to instantly react to its tactical environment are also
cornerstones of its operating concept. We have discussed all these ideas in depth years ago, but seeing them being packaged openly in the non-classified realm is
truly exciting and indicative of what likely exists in the clandestine realm.
We also get to
see the whole process of aerial recovery in action, having gotten just a glimpse of it in the recent past. The program aims to culminate in being able
to recover four Gremlin drones aboard a single aircraft within 30
minutes.
Once
recovered, the hope is that the Gremlin drones can be refurbished and refueled
within 24 hours for another sortie. Each drone is supposed to have a design
life of at least 20 missions. What's nice about this concept is that as the
drones age out they could be used for more risky tasks or even as kinetic
weapons themselves as part of a larger swarm. A DARPA press release states:
In addition to
preliminary flight tests, the team has focused on risk reduction via extensive
modeling and simulation. The team looked at how fifth generation aircraft
systems like the F-35 and F-22 respond to threats, and how they could
incorporate gremlins in higher risk areas. The gremlins’ expected lifetime of
about 20 uses could provide significant cost advantages by reducing payload and
airframe costs, and by having lower mission and maintenance costs than
conventional platforms, which are designed to operate for decades.
A C-130 from International Air Response is
currently acting as the mothership for Gremlins testing, but a variety of other
transports could be used for an operational iteration of the concept. DARPA's
release says:
The C-130 is
the demonstration platform for the Gremlins program, but Wierzbanowski says the
Services could easily modify the system for another transport aircraft or other
major weapons system. Modularity has made Gremlins attractive to potential
transition partners.
“We are
exploring opportunities with several transition partners and are not committed
to a single organization. Interest is strong with both the roll-on/roll-off
capability of the Gremlins system—as it does not require any permanent aircraft
modification—and a wing-mounted system to provide greater flexibility to a
wider range of aircraft,” said Wierzbanowski.
The video also clearly states the advantages of an
air-launched and recovered system like Gremlins. These positives include
smaller airframe sizes, decreased dependency on air base proximity, less cost
per mission, and the promotion of distribution of multiple disparate sensors
within a single swarm. As a result, these advantages provide a higher capacity
for risk-taking, both operationally and developmentally speaking.
We will continue to keep a close eye on the
Gremlins program as it enters its final proof-of-concept phase, but above all
else, it is another indication that an age of autonomous unmanned air warfare
is upon us.
Contact the author: Tyler@thedrive.com
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