AIR FORCE NEWS
Questions Surround Air Force’s New
Glider-Based Drone
7/12/2024
A crew chief sta to aTRA drone.
Air Force phot
In early May, U.S. Air Forces Central released a series of photographs of a glider-like drone preparing for an early-morning mission at an “undisclosed location.
Photo captions identified the
aircraft as the Unmanned Long-endurance Tactical Reconnaissance Aircraft, or
ULTRA.
At least one ULTRA drone has been
flying with 380th Air Expeditionary Wing as a low-cost, longer-endurance
alternative to the MQ-9 Reapers, which the wing also operates. But the Air
Force Research Laboratory — which developed ULTRA in a collaboration with
Fairfax, Virginia-headquartered DZYNE Technologies — won’t acknowledge that
aircraft is already operational.
“The ULTRA program continues to
progress through prototype development and test activities,” AFRL spokesman
Bryan Ripple said. “AFRL is not releasing further details on the ULTRA program
at this time as that information is pre-decisional or not yet approved for
public release.”
“As for the recent imagery of the
ULTRA program released by U.S. Air Forces Central” on the Defense Visual
Information Distribution Service website, “we cannot comment on the specific
location of any aircraft platform operating within the U.S. Central Command
area of responsibility due to operational security,” said Ann Stefanek, chief
of media operations in the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force.
A photo story from May 6 on the
AFCENT website — “AFCENT Commander visits 380th AEW” — shows Ninth Air Force
Commander Lt. Gen. Derek France speaking with a member of the ULTRA team in
front of the remotely piloted drone at an undisclosed location within the U.S.
Central Command area of responsibility on April 29.
France “visited the wing to get a
better understanding of [ULTRA’s] current operational capabilities, better
enabling him to make informed decisions throughout the region,” according to
the story.
The Air Force’s fiscal year 2025
budget request describes ULTRA as a technology and concept development effort
to procure an unmanned aerial system that is capable of multiple-day duration
flights while still being “extremely affordable.”
The service proposes buying four
ULTRA drones in 2025 at a gross weapons system unit cost of about $9 million
each, about $35 million total. That compares favorably with the cost of the
MQ-9, last recorded as costing $23 million per unit in the Air Force’s 2023
budget request, and the RQ-4 Global Hawks the 380th AEW operated until recently
at more than $130 million each.
AFRL’s Center for Rapid Innovation
has had ULTRA in development since at least 2019. The drone went from concept
to first flight in less than 10 months, according to lab press releases.
A laboratory web page provides the
only detail the Air Force is willing to share on ULTRA, describing it as an
inexpensive, GPS-hardened, ultra-long endurance intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance platform with an endurance capability that “exceeds 80 hours
while carrying over 400 pounds of payload.”
ULTRA looks like an unmanned glider
because it was developed by DZYNE and CRI from a German-made manned sport
glider called the Stemme S12. The S12 aligned with ULTRA’s emphasis on using
commercial-off-the-shelf drone technologies “to ensure acquisition and
sustainment costs remain low,” the web page stated.
Designed to be an “ISR truck,”
ULTRA can carry a range of electro-optical/infrared, radio frequency and other
low-cost intelligence collection payloads and sensors in a reconfigurable
platform. Integration of lower-cost sensors is possible due to the drone’s
flight at “lower operating altitudes, which don’t require large optics or
high-power RF to maintain effectiveness,” according to the web page.
Flown with a command-and-control
system that allows for “point and click” operations, ULTRA can go aloft
worldwide via satellite-based links “that also provide the high-rate ISR data
feed to the operators in real time,” the web page said.
The Air Force has stated that ULTRA
will be able to operate at “excessive ranges” required in areas like the
Pacific and that its low price will enable the Air Force to procure aircraft
systems in large quantities.
Asked whether further purchases of
ULTRA drones beyond the four planned for acquisition in fiscal year 2025 were
likely, Stefanek reiterated, “the Air Force has nothing else to provide based
on operational security reasons.” ND
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