Warzone/The Drive: Everything We Learned From Boeing About Its Potentially Game-Changing Loyal Wingman Drone
The stealthy Airpower Teaming System drone has a snap-on nose that can accommodate a huge variety of payloads and can be swapped quickly in the field.
In what is a massive milestone for Boeing and potentially for unmanned aerial combat systems as a whole, the company officially rolled out the first of three pre-production unmanned teaming aircraft, which is the central component of a total system called the Airpower Teaming System, or ATS for short. The War Zone was part of a small roundtable of journalists that talked with two of the minds behind ATS ahead of the official unveiling and we learned a lot about this potentially game-changing system, to say the least.
ATS is designed to work with manned aerial assets in the 'loyal wingman' role and to do so at a remarkably low cost. In effect, the concept has to potential to drastically expand the size of a tactical jet force at a fraction of the cost of buying full-up manned airframes, while also infusing a whole new set of disruptive tactics into an air arm's playbook. It will also make manned assets more survivable by not having to risk them during the direst parts of some missions. You can read more about this concept overall, here.
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More News On Boeing Unveiling Its Potentially Game-Changing Loyal Wingman Drone
Australia unveils its first military aircraft to be built at home in 50 years as Scott Morrison looks to 'sharpen the country's edge' amid tensions with China -- Daily Mail
Boeing could produce Loyal Wingman fighter-like drone by middle of decade: executive -- Reuters
Boeing rolls out Australia’s first ‘Loyal Wingman’ combat drone -- Defense News
Boeing presents first Loyal Wingman drone aircraft to Australia -- UPI
Australian military gets first drone that can fly with artificial intelligence -- CNN
Attack of the drones: Boeing rolls out first ‘Loyal Wingman’ AI aircraft in Australia -- Geekwire
Boeing Unveils First AI Drone Designed for Australian Air Force -- Sputnik
1 comment:
Not designed for Australian airforce, it was designed BY Australia, get it right.
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