Konseptet er ikke ukjent. Jeg har hatt denne på bloggen før, men først nå er den testet. (Red.)
Off the California coast,
the US Navy tests hunting subs with an aerial drone
By: David B. Larter 20 hours ago
General Atomics MQ-9B is in development for maritime use. A modified MQ-9A was recently used in an anti-submarine
warfare
demonstration. (A rendering of the MQ-9B from General Atomics)
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Navy and General
Atomics in November used sonobuoys dropped
from an MQ-9A
Block V Reaper to track a simulated submarine target on a U.S.
Navy Pacific test range, in what the contractor says is the first time an
aerial drone has deployed a self-contained anti-submarine warfare system.
The Reaper deployed a mix of 10 sonobuoys –
deployed to measure water conditions and monitor for targets – then received
and transmitted the data in real time to a monitoring station at Laguna Flight
Operations Facility located at Yuma Proving Ground in Arizona.
The test was part of the development of the MQ-9B SeaGuardian
drone, which is part of a research and development project in conjunction with
the Navy’s Naval Air Systems Command. If the Navy can make this concept of
operations work, it has the potential to significantly lower the cost of
submarine hunting and free up larger, more expensive manned sub-hunting
platforms such as the P-8A Poseidon, to act as a command-and-control platform.
The Reaper managed to acquire and track an
expendable anti-submarine warfare training target for three hours using the
General Dynamics UYS-505 acoustic processing software.
Navy buys
two used MQ-9A Reaper drones
The U.S. Marine Corps has been using the two drones in Afghanistan in a
Contractor Owned Contractor Operated agreement since September 2018.
By: Nathan Strout
According to a General Atomics readout of the
test, the MQ-9B SeaGuardian will have four wing stations available to carry up
to four sonobuoy dispenser system pods, packing up to 40 ‘A’ size or 80 ‘G’
size sonobuoys.
“This demonstration is a first for airborne ASW.
The successful completion of this testing paves the way for future development
of more Anti-Submarine Warfare capabilities from our MQ-9s,” said General
Atomics Aeronautical Systems President David Alexander in a statement. “We look
forward to continuing collaboration with the U.S. Navy as they explore
innovative options for distributed maritime operations in the undersea domain.”
Doing airborne anti-submarine warfare is an
all-around cheaper way to do ASW than with multiple P-8As, which cost much more
per flight hour, said Bryan Clark, a retired submarine officer and senior
fellow at Hudson Institute who co-authored a recent ASW study that
looked at this concept.
“Whdoes is it allows now the P-8 doesn’t have to
be the only thing that delivers the sonobuoys,” Clark said. “So the P-8 can
start to step back to be more of a [command and control] platform, it doesn’t
have to service all sonobuoy fields.
“Right now what has happened is a P-8 goes out,
drops all the sonobuoys and hangs around burning flight hours while it monitors
the sonobuoy field. And of course, you’ve got to have multiple P-8s to be able
to cover the area. Whereas with this idea, you could have MQ-9s doing the
deploying and the servicing of the sonobuoy field at a much lower flight hour
cost.”
The limitation is that the P-8As have a much
larger capacity for sonobuoys, which over large areas means they’ll still be
important, Clark said. But with the support of drones able to receive and
process data, you won’t need to risk as many P-8As to service the sonobuoy
field, making the whole operation cheaper.
“It really breaks the cost structure of the
current ASW concept of operations,” he said.
A rendering of the MQ-9B (General Atomics)
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