Home PHP Scripts Contact News RSS Readers Donations

Army Technology

 
Main

Technology

Army Technology
Cyberwars
Military Technology
Newsfactor Technology
Technology World
Yahoo Technology
Random Feeds

Archives

| Dec 2008 | Nov 2008 | Oct 2008 | Sep 2008 | Aug 2008 | Jul 2008 | Jun 2008 | May 2008 | Apr 2008 | Mar 2008 | Feb 2008 | Jan 2008 | Dec 2007 | Nov 2007 | Oct 2007 | Aug 2007 | Jul 2007 |

Tue, 31 Jul 07
Shadow 200 RQ-7 - Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System
http://www.army-technology.com/projects/shadow200uav/
Shadow 200 is the smallest of the Shadow family of unmanned aircraft systems developed by AAI. It is in operational service with the US Army and US Marine Corps.

"Shadow 200 is the smallest of the Shadow family of unmanned aircraft systems developed by AAI."

Shadow 200 is used to locate, recognise and identify targets up to 125km from a brigade tactical operations centre. The system recognises tactical vehicles by day and night from an altitude of 8,000ft and at a slant range of 3.5km.

Imagery and telemetry data is transmitted in near-real time from the Shadow ground control station to joint stars common ground station, all-sources analysis system and to the army field artillery targeting and direction system.

Shadow is in operational service in Afghanistan and in Iraq and, by the end of the second quarter of 2007, will have flown more than 190,000 flight hours in over 47,000 missions.

The Shadow family of unmanned aircraft systems is produced at AAI's facilities in Hunt Valley, Maryland. AAI Corporation is a subsidiary of United Industrial Corporation.

TUAS PROGRAMME

The AAI Shadow TUAS team is led by the prime contractor AAI Corporation with major team members CDL Systems Ltd, Chandler May Inc, Sierra Nevada Corporation, IAI-TAMAM and UAV Engines Ltd. The programme is managed by the US army unmanned aircraft systems project manager's office in Huntsville, Alabama.

In 1999 the United States Army awarded AAI Corporation a Low-Rate Initial Production (LRIP) contract to develop the Shadow Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System (TUAS). The Shadow TUAS carries the US Army designations RQ-7A and RQ-7B, although all RQ- 7A model aircraft have now been retired and replaced by the RQ-7B model. The system provides brigade commanders with improved capability in target acquisition, battle damage assessment and battle management.

"The Shadow family of unmanned aircraft systems is produced at AAI's facilities in Hunt Valley, Maryland."

At the beginning of 2001, AAI delivered the first four Shadow TUAV systems ordered by the US Army and built under the LRIP phase of the programme.

The United States Government conducted a series of demonstration trials under the Operational Tempo (OPTEMPO) programme at Fort Huachucaa, Arizona during 2001. The Shadow systems were then transferred to Fort Hood in Texas for the US Army to carry out Initial Operational Test and Evaluation (IOTE) trials.

In March 2002, AAI received a contract valued at $22.3m to extend TUAS production, bringing the value of the TUAV program to $135m. The contract covered the production of five additional Shadow systems. The first full-rate system was delivered to the US Army in September 2003. Shadow was deployed to Iraq in January 2004.

In the first quarter of 2004, the US Army ordered 33 Shadow systems with over 140 air vehicles and delivery of the longer-range RQ-7B was started by August 2004.

By June 2007, the US Army had ordered 74 Shadow 200 systems (including 296 air vehicles and 148 ground control systems) for system deliveries through January 2009.

Also in June 2007, it was announced that Shadow 200 will replace the Pioneer UAV in US Marine Corps service by the end of the year. Two systems have been ordered for the USMC.

SHADOW SYSTEM

A typical block1 Shadow system includes three air vehicles (plus one spare air vehicle) with payloads, two ground control stations, portable ground control station, air vehicle transport truck, launch and recovery equipment and personnel carrier. The complete system can be transported to and within a battlefield in two C-130 aircraft.

"Shadow 200 is used to locate, recognise and identify targets up to 125km from a brigade tactical operations centre."

TUAS AIR VEHICLE

The air vehicle system can be transported by two military wheeled vehicles and can be operated round-the-clock from unprepared sites by the 22-soldier crew. The Shadow TUAS can carry payloads up to 27kg (60lb) including sensors and electronic warfare systems.

Larger variants of other Shadow aircraft with a larger fuselage and wingspan are capable of carrying payloads up to 45.4kg (100lb) with minimal impact on cost or performance.

The air vehicle is of composite structure. Its compact size and small engine produce a very low radar and infrared signature, making it very difficult to detect.

The original RQ-7A air vehicle has a wingspan of 3.89m and carries a maximum payload of 25.3kg. The maximum endurance is five hours 30 minutes. The RQ-7B is a longer-endurance version, with increased wingspan of 4.27m and larger tail unit, payload up to 27.2kg and endurance of six to seven hours, depending on mission profile.

ENGINE

The air vehicle is powered by a UEL AR 741 rotary engine developing 28.3kW and driving a two-bladed pusher propeller. Fire and explosion-resistant fuel cells are installed in the wings. The RQ-7A and the longer-endurance RQ-7B models have a fuel capacity of 40l and 57l.

PAYLOADS

The payloads are selected according to the mission requirements and include advanced electro-optical and infrared systems, planned synthetic aperture radar and moving target indicator, hyperspectral imagery, lightweight communications relay package, marker / illuminator, laser range finder and target designator.

"The compact size and small engine produce a very low radar and infrared signature."

The US Army Shadow 200 is fitted with the POP-200 or POP-300 lightweight electro-optical system supplied by IAI Tamam.

The system is two-axis gyro-stabilised and fitted with Forward-Looking Infrared (FLIR) and CCD TV sensor array. It can be fitted with a laser rangefinder and target designator and is capable of correlative automatic target tracking.

LAUNCH AND RECOVERY

The launch of the Shadow 200 TUAS can be conducted in two ways allowing the military personnel the flexibility to choose the most appropriate launch site during field operations. A standard wheeled take-off procedure can be used or the air vehicle can be launched from a hydraulic rail launcher.

The guidance of the air vehicle can be pre-programmed before take-off or remotely controlled during the flight.

The air vehicle climbs at a rate of 300m to 450m (1,000ft to 1,500ft) a minute. The vehicle has a cruise speed and quick-dash speed of 148km/h to 250km/h (80kt to 135kt) to proceed to the operating area. Its minimum speed is 111km/h (60 kt).

The Shadow TUAS air vehicle can use a conventional wheeled landing on a flat surface about 95m in length. An alternative recovery method uses a deployable arresting hook on the air vehicle and ground based arresting cables.

GROUND STATION

CDL Systems Ltd, based in Calgary, Alberta, was contracted to develop the vehicle control system software. The Ground Control Station (GCS) is a sheltered ruggedised portable system with a suite of vehicle control and C4I interface software. The ground control segment of the system has been developed by AAI using pre-existing and proven hardware and software components. The software was modified to meet the operational requirements of the TUAV program.

The Portable Ground Control Station (PGCS), one of the units of the ground control system, is installed in a set of rugged transit cases.

"The Shadow air vehicle can be pre-programmed before take-off or remotely controlled during the flight."

The rugged transit cases are easily transported and allow the PGCS to be rapidly set up and torn down in the field. Th


© amigura.co.uk All Rights Reserved.