Mystery bird-like UAV crashed in Pakistan

seruriermarshal

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A Pakistani villager holds a wreckage of a suspected surveillance drone which is crashed in Pakistani border town of Chaman along the Afghanistan border in Pakistan on Thursday, Aug 25, 2011. Suspected US surveillance drone crashes in Pakistan military area near border with Afghanistan.
 

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seems like CIA PROJECT AQUILINE ?

http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,12684.msg125042.html#msg125042

so AQUILINE never end ?
 
quellish said:
Probably not directly related to AQUILINE, any bird-like UAV in that size is going to arrive at a similar configuration. AFRL and a few startups (Prioria, etc) have small UAVs that are very similar (much smaller than this thing though). It's not likely at all that AQUILINE continued after termination.

Or they take it into another Project ?
 
Am I right that there are four static sensors instead of a moving turret? (See first pic)
 
Perhaps a Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company Palmdale (ADP) Stalker UAS variant. Notice the fastener pattern around the turret in the Pakistan airframe and that on the Stalker UAS turret? I noticed Lockheed recently removed a You Tube video with Thomas Koonce holding a version of the their turret closely to the camera during the interview. My bet is it may have been Lockheed Skunk Works (Palmdale):


<a href="http://media1.kalam.tv/thumbs/large_slideshows/2011/08/25/73cad5ef31ed1cce9c0b211a8fdd9621.jpg">Image: Crashed UAS in Pakistan 1</a>

<a href="http://fastcache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/08/xlarge_birddrone.jpg">Image: Crashed UAS in Pakistan 2</a>

<a href="http://defenseindex.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/stalker.jpg">Image: Lockheed Stalker 2008</a>

<a href="http://defense-update.com/images_new/stalker_pld.jpg">Image: Lockheed Stalker 2011</a>

Videos: Lockheed Stalker and Thomas Koonce Interview (suspiciously removed)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNymMcD1A-0


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9p2yUM1PE0
 
GJ33 said:
Am I right that there are four static sensors instead of a moving turret? (See first pic)

The hole for the Turret can be seen on what is the underside of the Bird I believe, the four mystery sensor apertures are actually on the top.

So the GWOT gives us another Black Bird... very interesting...
 
mr_london_247 said:
GJ33 said:
Am I right that there are four static sensors instead of a moving turret? (See first pic)

The hole for the Turret can be seen on what is the underside of the Bird I believe, the four mystery sensor apertures are actually on the top.

So the GWOT gives us another Black Bird... very interesting...

SATCOM ?
 
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=950519&page=95

I'm going to show me geekdom here ;D Reminds me so much of the Goshawk I think some one saw it and went 'Aha!'
 

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Makes you wonder what else is out there being secretly used on special operations and covert ops? ;) There's so many small UAVs being used now it gets pretty confusing sorting out what is what.
 
New images of the mystery bird-like drone crashed in Pakistan. Taken in Iraq:


http://theaviationist.com/2012/09/14/bird-drone/
 
The Falcon operates as a team with Predator UAVs, and may have a home at the Yucca Lake Aerial Operations Facility.
 
quellish said:
The Falcon operates as a team with Predator UAVs, and may have a home at the Yucca Lake Aerial Operations Facility.

Are you sure of the name?
 

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Crashed drone in Somalia shows how the military hides its eyes in the sky

Drones flying over a war zone are nothing new, and as they've proliferated, there have been more efforts to make them harder to see from the ground.

Case in point? A drone that was recently downed in Mogadishu, Somalia looks less like a drone and more like a large bird.

Local reports associate this drone, which came down on May 1st, with Somalia’s National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA). It's unclear exactly how it was downed, or if similar drones have been used in the country before.

What’s most interesting about this particular drone are its wings: in addition to looking like a bird, the wings will flap, although it looks like it’s actually powered by two sets of propellers. A quick glance at it flying overhead likely won’t attract a lot of attention, which is exactly what you’d want for a surveillance robot.

The US Army Special Operations Command has used a similar drone that can be fired out of a canon or deployed by hand. Like this drone discovered in Somalia, it has wings that can flap, making it appear like a regular bird flying overhead.

As Atlas Obscura points out, there have been concerted efforts for companies to mimic bird behavior in drones both for appearance and for the obvious reason: physics. Birds, after all, are the experts at flying, and learning just how they fly is a good step in adapting their mechanical counterparts to accomplish the same tasks.

It’s unknown who is responsible for manufacturing this particular drone, but it’s certainly going to give observers on the ground pause when they see a flock of birds overhead.
 

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sferrin said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2mR7q1M6j8

Thank you for posting.
displays why the flapping wing is a failed uas strategy. great recovery but w/o high energy input drops like rock.. no apparent glide whatsoever.. Helicopter like low low Endurance. any length observance clearly displays non-biologic origins as well.
 

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