The US Boeing - Australian Loyal Wingman Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle (UCAV) has been unveiled Avalon Air Show near Melbourne, February 26/27 2019. It is also being called the "Boeing Airpower Teaming System". Their is stiff US, UK and European competition to it.
Loyal Wingman is a fighter sized "drone" that can work with manned aircraft (eg. Australia's
F-35As, P-8A Poseidons, Super Hornets and AEW&C E7 Wedgetail aircraft) and can operate individually as a remote guided drone or as a loitering missile.
Until the February 26/27, 2019 unveiling its development was secret. Joint development is by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Australia's DoD, Boeing operating in Brisbane, Australia. Also US Kratos Defense & Security Solutions is involved. See the latest on the Kratos XQ-58A Valkyrie on June 18, 2019.
Having no onboard pilot or life-support systems Loyal Wingman's projected range may be twice that of an F-35A with a similar weapons load. Specifications for the prototype are few but Loyal Wingman may be currently 11.7 metres long and have a range of 2,000+ nautical miles (3,700+ km).
Loyal Wingman's uses could include:
- electronic warfare, ie "jamming" which makes F-35s even more difficult to detect
- optical and radar reconnaissance and sigint intercepts
- on remote human orders dropping guided bombs, air to ground missiles, and firing air-to-air
missiles, and as
- a loitering kamikaze "cruise" missile which, with a large warhead, could be ordered to crash itself
into high value targets (hopefully not being 5G hacked to crash into Australian "targets").
As there is no onboard pilot it can operate in higher risk environments, read China and China's SAM armed South China Sea islands. The US could also use it against Russia and Iran.
Apparently no figures on project cost have been published but it is supposed to be Boeing's largest investment in drones outside the US.
Loyal Wingman is a fighter sized "drone" that can work with manned aircraft (eg. Australia's
F-35As, P-8A Poseidons, Super Hornets and AEW&C E7 Wedgetail aircraft) and can operate individually as a remote guided drone or as a loitering missile.
Until the February 26/27, 2019 unveiling its development was secret. Joint development is by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), Australia's DoD, Boeing operating in Brisbane, Australia. Also US Kratos Defense & Security Solutions is involved. See the latest on the Kratos XQ-58A Valkyrie on June 18, 2019.
Having no onboard pilot or life-support systems Loyal Wingman's projected range may be twice that of an F-35A with a similar weapons load. Specifications for the prototype are few but Loyal Wingman may be currently 11.7 metres long and have a range of 2,000+ nautical miles (3,700+ km).
Loyal Wingman's uses could include:
- electronic warfare, ie "jamming" which makes F-35s even more difficult to detect
- optical and radar reconnaissance and sigint intercepts
- on remote human orders dropping guided bombs, air to ground missiles, and firing air-to-air
missiles, and as
- a loitering kamikaze "cruise" missile which, with a large warhead, could be ordered to crash itself
into high value targets (hopefully not being 5G hacked to crash into Australian "targets").
As there is no onboard pilot it can operate in higher risk environments, read China and China's SAM armed South China Sea islands. The US could also use it against Russia and Iran.
Apparently no figures on project cost have been published but it is supposed to be Boeing's largest investment in drones outside the US.
Fullsize mock-up (Courtesy Boeing via FlightGlobal) of Loyal Wingman at Australia's Avalon Air Show (?) February 2019. It looks swept back enough to go supersonic, maybe cruise supersonic(?). Drone maker Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (see Kratos website) is also working with Boeing on Loyal Wingman.
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Artwork of the Loyal Wingman UCAV (Courtesy Boeing and the Australia's DoD via Australia's ABC)
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AUSTRALIA ALSO BUYING OTHER DRONES
Australia is also buying 2 other cutting edge US drone types, including:
- 6 x Triton (Global Hawk derivative large long range,
unarmed UAVs) for a $7
Billion project.
The Tritons will be capable of flying over China’s South China Sea islands where (given the
Triton’s unmanned nature) they may be shot down by China in times of tension. and
The Tritons will be capable of flying over China’s South China Sea islands where (given the
Triton’s unmanned nature) they may be shot down by China in times of tension. and
- 12 to 16 x Reaper armed UAVs in a $400
million project. These may be particularly useful to
Australian forces in
the perpetual Afghanistan and Middle East conflicts.
It is likely Australia’s purchases of the Reaper, and especially the far more expensive Tritons, eased US Government permissions to transfer highly sensitive Loyal Wingman technical details to Australia.
COMPETITION
As I guess-stimate the Australian domestic market would be less than 100 Loyal Wingmans in the 2020s it will need to be exported to other nations. This is especially to the US Airforce and maybe USN, to be commercially viable and to enjoy the most advanced US software and hardware sensor and avionics upgrades. By restricting Loyal Wingman to Five Eye customers there may, or may not be, some commercial advantage.
Some more technically mature(?) competitors include:
- the US Kratos XQ-58 Valkyrie - first flight May 5, 2019. US Airforce interested. May just beat
Loyal Wingman to market or it may be rolled into the Loyal Wingman Project?
- the US Northrop Grumman X-47B that first flew in 2011. The US Navy has been interested in
using the X-47B for carrier operations.
- US General Atomics Avenger - first flew 2009. Hot competition as General Atomics is already the
popular and trusted Predator A and Reaper builder.
- the British BAE Systems Taranis (aka "Raptor"). France may also supply some components.
Flight testing has actually taken place in Australia, in South Australia's Woomera Test Range in
2013.
- Boeing's own Phantom Ray, first flew 2011. Also Boeing's X-45, flew 2002.
- France's Dassault eEUROn - first flew 2012, and
- Germany and Spain's EADS Barracuda - first flew 2006.
- there would be several very new commercially unflight-tested Western, Russian and Chinese
projects and more established but "black projects" ie. secret defined by their "black budgets".
- for example there are few hard details on the US Lockheed Martin (LM) RQ-170 Sentinel - first
spotted 2007. Follow on LM projects would be/are black.
- there would be several very new commercially unflight-tested Western, Russian and Chinese
projects and more established but "black projects" ie. secret defined by their "black budgets".
- for example there are few hard details on the US Lockheed Martin (LM) RQ-170 Sentinel - first
spotted 2007. Follow on LM projects would be/are black.
- China and Russia are working on their own projects with Western customers unlikely, eg:
: Russia's Sukhoi Okhotnik (aka Sukhoi S-70) - first flight expected 2019. Shares some
technologies with Russia’s not yet ready 5th gen Sukhoi Su-57 fighter, and
: China's AVIC 601-S, no reported test flights, maybe early days yet.
: Russia's Sukhoi Okhotnik (aka Sukhoi S-70) - first flight expected 2019. Shares some
technologies with Russia’s not yet ready 5th gen Sukhoi Su-57 fighter, and
: China's AVIC 601-S, no reported test flights, maybe early days yet.
SOURCES
I looked at media reports including Australia's ABC, DefenceConnect and FlightGlobal February 26/27, 2019 and many of my own ideas.
Pete
Good to see some properly thought out innovation from Australia. Ideas such as Nuka, CEA radars,, JDAM-ER has made people stop & look at what we are doing. To achieve something, sometimes just an idea is enough to get the ball rolling. There is multitudes of very good engineers (though there never seems to be enough), that just need that flash bulb revelation to point them in the right direction.There is more out there, we just need the powers with the cheque book to notice & understand what they are looking at. Perhaps even that Seasprite eposide was worth something after all.
ReplyDeleteIt is refreshing, to see a government “committed “ to technology, albeit defence, but then again it is an area where customers will pay handsomely if that product is highly desirable. Those returns substantially furnish R&D and variants development. I can only hope the government realises that this impetus must apply to parallel fields and education is the heart and soul of prosperity.
ReplyDeleteThis Loyal Wingman drone is a great effort by Australia. It's good to see us working with Boeing on the project. BUT, but I have one tiny problem; and that is with the name of the thing. "Loyal Wingman" is too coldly objective (for me), long winded and dry. I have a name that I think is more evocatively Australian and has associations of "loyalty" and competence and even harkens back to the mateship bush epoch. I would prefer the drone be called the COBBER...there's also an element of trustworthiness in the name. & another also in that the name COBBER has a crisp concise two syllable (COB-BER) vivid sound to it. Just an thought.
ReplyDeleteHi Anonymous
ReplyDeleteYes, its good to see Australian aerospace engineers being involved in building an aircraft without permanently moving to the US or UK etc.
Regards
Pete
Hi "The (Greenies') Lawnmower"
ReplyDeleteAlas! A problem with calling Loyal Wingman the "COBBER" is its a two nation project (Australia AND the US).
Loyal Wingman is also known in the US as the "Boeing Airpower Teaming System" with the Designer listed as the "Boeing Phantom Works" see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_Airpower_Teaming_System
Yanks would have no idea what "Cobber" means - other than seeing it as a quaint, a bit corny, loyal Aussie, term.
Also a "loyal wingman" is a respected tactical configuration concept among fighter pilots in foreign, potential customer, countries generally, eg. the RAF, RCAF and European airforces etc.
Cheers
Pete