Watch Australia's First New Warplane in Half a Century Take Flight
By: Kyle Mizokami (MSN)
A new drone wrinkle...
© Boeing/YouTube Watch Australia's first new military aircraft in half a century take flight. Boeing's unmanned"Loyal Wingman" accompanies fighter jets into combat.
- Boeing's new Loyal Wingman drone has completed its first flight in the Australian outback.
- The aircraft is designed to accompany fighter jets into combat.
- The drone is also the first domestically produced Australian military aircraft in more than 50 years.
Last weekend, Boeing and the Royal Australian Air Force reached an important milestone deep in the Outback: the maiden flight of the first new military aircraft designed and manufactured in Australia in more than half a century.
✈ You love bad*** planes. So do we. Let's nerd out over them together.
Boeing's Loyal Wingman drone will act as a test bed for what the aerospace manufacturer calls"air teaming," or the side-by-side flying of crewed and uncrewed warplanes.
Here's a video of the inaugural test flight: Replay Video SETTINGS OFF HD HQ SD LO Skip Ad
The flight took place on March 1, with a pilot controlling the aircraft remotely from Australia's Woomera Range Complex. Boeing is working with the Australian government and 35 Australian industry teams to develop the aircraft.
Boeing first unveiled the Loyal Wingman in mockup form at Australia's 2019 Avalon air show. Since then, the real aircraft has performed taxi, ground handling, navigation, and control tests, as well as tests of its pilot interface. Boeing claims the aircraft went from design to flight testing in just 3 years, thanks to the use of model-based digital engineering techniques.
During the test flight, the aircraft completed"a successful takeoff under its own power before flying a predetermined route at different speeds and altitudes to verify flight functionality and demonstrate the performance of the Airpower Teaming System design," Boeing says.
© Boeing Australia The Loyal Wingman drone during taxi tests.
The Loyal Wingman concept envisions crewed and uncrewed aircraft flying together on combat missions. The uncrewed aircraft could autonomously fly a mission in support of the crewed aircraft, carrying jamming equipment, sensors, or even air-to-air or air-to-ground
weapons.
© Boeing Australia Concept art of four Loyal Wingman drones flying alongside a F/A-18F Super Hornet, a fighter flown by the Royal Australian Air Force.
An uncrewed drone could act as the eyes and ears of a fighter jet, allowing the crewed jet to turn off its radar and thus make it more difficult to detect. The drone could also fly ahead of a crewed fighter, hunting surface-to-air missile systems and clearing the way for jets with humans inside. Two drones could also act as flying magazines, with crewed jets directing them to launch missiles and bombs against targets.
Boeing Australia will build four Loyal Wingman prototypes and use their data to advance its air teaming program. It's not clear if Loyal Wingman will become an operational system at this point, though Boeing hints it can already carry unspecified payloads.
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Future warfare, ala SkyNet.
heh, that's the first thing that crossed my mind. mass produced for any shooting war and no G forces or flying ordinance at the VR pilots xxxxx miles away. the ultimate kamikaze. a pilot that has been trained with game software, and in the most probable scenario, an average age somewhere in the early teens. all drone weapons delivery systems are the future of a modern military. the technology is available.
Spot on mate.
Interesting ... does it have any Avro Arrow parts?
I don't think anyone would trust parts from the 50's
and almost everyone involved with developing the CF-105 is surely passed by now.
Another interesting story though.
It looks like a shark
Only a trout would think that ...
oy
Very sleek and cool.
Want to place bets on which country hacks the drone first?
Drones have their uses; unfortunately so do hackers.
First happened in 2009, reportedly took until 2014 to correct all Predator drones and ground stations.
Drones have a rich history back to 1945, and a few losses.
I remember a movie that depicted an autonomous fighter jet that went haywire ...