Hull down
ACCESS: Confidential
- Joined
- 19 February 2023
- Messages
- 132
- Reaction score
- 323
DARPA gremlin or rapid dragon esque systems?There is a whole lot between Expendable and Reusable that they haven’t been talking about much.
DARPA gremlin or rapid dragon esque systems?There is a whole lot between Expendable and Reusable that they haven’t been talking about much.
American-Made Shahed-136 Kamikaze Drone Clones Being Tested By Marines
![]()
American-Made Shahed-136 Kamikaze Drone Clones Being Tested By Marines
It's increasingly clear that the Pentagon has big hopes for LUCAS, ones that will likely span the services.www.twz.com
And the Shahed-136 drone IIRC is an unlicensed copy of a German drone.
Harpy*The overall design seems inspired by the Israeli Harop
Conclusions:
UAS carrier airship is the next logical step in the deployment of UAS for military and civilian applications– Provides an operationally flexible airborne UAS operations base– Provides UAS range extension via OTH relay UAS and inflight UAS refueling– Offers potential as a cost effective means to operate large groups of UAS in coordinated tasks– Current technologies are in hand to develop the UAS carrier airship and its UAS support systems
I think he tought of 1Drohne-Anti-Radar (DAR) which had an similiar shape and conceptI do not believe so. It does however use an unlicensed copy of a German engine. The overall design seems inspired by the Israeli Harop, though that is a much more complicated and capable system in comparison to most Shaheds.
Boeing, northrop, LM, GA, anduril, Kratos, shieldAI, firestorm labs, mach industries, aeroenvironment...
Who else makes drones?
One has to wonder how difficult it would be to do IFF against ground targets to avoid friendly fire onFuture CCAs imagined as multirole platforms, Air Force official says
Future CCAs imagined as multirole platforms, Air Force official says | InsideDefense.com
The Air Force is not envisioning its Collaborative Combat Aircraft as "one-trick ponies," a top service official told Inside Defense, but rather as multirole platforms able to complete a variety of missions.insidedefense.com
You could probably solve that problem by specifying geographical boundaries* for attack without human authority, but yeah, SEAD and interdiction will probably be their bread and butterOne has to wonder how difficult it would be to do IFF against ground targets to avoid friendly fire onBritishinfantry ...
Maybe CAS is out of the question and taken over by other assets. Instead we are mainly looking at SEAD, ground attack on more strategic targets, and maritime interdiction.
One has to wonder how difficult it would be to do IFF against ground targets to avoid friendly fire onBritishinfantry ...
Maybe CAS is out of the question and taken over by other assets. Instead we are mainly looking at SEAD, ground attack on more strategic targets, and maritime interdiction.
“It will be a different aircraft, but we’re going to leverage similar components, design philosophies,” said Jason Levin, Anduril’s senior vice president of Air Dominance and Strike, referencing Anduril’s YFQ-44 “Fury.”
Levin was among the Anduril and General Atomics Aeronautical Systems representatives at the Singapore Air Show 2026 exhibition this week. According to Levin, Anduril is not modifying the U.S. Air Force’s Fury – which is not aircraft carrier capable – to meet the Navy’s requirements but will use the development path already carved out by Fury. The programs sharing similar components, avionics, task architecture and software development could allow the Navy’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program processes to be carried out more quickly.
In Anduril’s development of Fury, the CCA went from clean sheet to first flight in around 500 days. Building a CCA for the Navy would require Anduril to look closely at the Navy’s concept of operations for the CCA and tailor their entry accordingly. Levin did not disclose more specifics of the Navy’s CCA requirements and program deadlines.