Thursday, February 5, 2015

The Navy's unmanned drone project gets pushed back a year

140817-N-SB299-190 ATLANTIC OCEAN (Aug. 17, 2014) The X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration (UCAS-D) conducts flight operations aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71). The aircraft completed a series of tests demonstrating its ability to operate safely and seamlessly with manned aircraft. Theodore Roosevelt is underway preparing for future deployments. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Alex Millar/Released)


For the last few years, the Navy has been working on UCASS, a project to build a drone that'll replace surveillance and attack craft with one vehicle. We've already seen the X-47B demonstrate its ability to fly with manned squadrons and land on a carrier, but it looks as if we won't be seeing it in action until 2023 at the earliest. Unfortunately, it transpires that those higher up the chain have raised concerns about the project's cost and capability, and work isn't scheduled to begin until next year at the very earliest.


If Reuters is to be believed, Naval bean counters are worried that the platform will be too expensive to run should they decide to buy a fleet. Defensetech , meanwhile, says that senior figures at the Pentagon are concerned that the craft isn't stealthy enough to do the job that it's being bought to do. Either way, the Navy has admitted that it won't be launching the "competition," the process by which defense companies tender to build the fleet, until some point in 2016. Maybe it needs to save some cash after eating such a hefty loss on the Sea Slice.

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Via: Reuters, Defensetech


Source: US Navy


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