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Author Topic: The Global Hawk UAV  (Read 1794 times)
Brendan
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« on: December 10, 2007, 08:27:21 AM »

The Global Hawk UAV



"Most people have no idea what stealth brings to the battle. Basically, they come into the fight at a high mach thrust, start killing enemies' way out with AMRAAMS, and continue doing that until everyone is dead, and no one ever sees them or paints them on radar. There is practically no radio chatter because all the guys in the flight are tied together electronically at Edwards AFB, and can see who is targeting who, and they have AWACS direct input and 360° situational awareness from that and other sensors.

Remember that when Global Hawk is on a killing mission in Iraq or Afghanistan, the 'pilot' is sitting at a console at Edwards AFB in CA. "


For more articles and discussion about Global Hawk on Infowars/PrisonPlanet/TruthNews:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&as_qdr=all&q=%22global+hawk%22+site%3A*.infowars.*

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&as_qdr=all&q=%22global+hawk%22+site%3A*.prisonplanet.*

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&as_qdr=all&q=%22global+hawk%22+site%3A*.truthnews.*


Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RQ-4_Global_Hawk


The Global Hawk UAV


Overview
In role and design, it is somewhat similar to the Lockheed U-2, the venerable 1950s spy plane. It is a theater commander's asset to both provide a broad overview and systematically target surveillance shortfalls. The Global Hawk air vehicle is able to provide high resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)—that can penetrate cloud-cover and sandstorms—and Electro-Optical/Infrared (EO/IR) imagery at long range with long loiter times over target areas. It can survey as much as 100,000 square kilometers (40,000 square miles) of terrain a day. If a Global Hawk was flown out from San Francisco, it would be able to operate in Maine for 24 hours, observe a 370 x 370 kilometer (230 x 230 mile) grid, and then fly back home.

Potential missions for the Global Hawk cover the spectrum of intelligence collection capability to support forces in worldwide peace, crisis, and wartime operations. According to the Air Force, the capabilities of the aircraft will allow more precise targeting of weapons and better protection of forces through superior surveillance capabilities.

The "R" is the Department of Defense designation for reconnaissance; "Q" means unmanned aircraft system. The "4" refers to it being the fourth of a series of purpose-built unmanned aircraft systems. "A" or "B" refers to these being the first and second versions, respectively.

The Global Hawk is the first UAV to be certified by the FAA to file its own flight plans and use civilian air corridors in the United States with no advance notice.[1] This potentially paves the way for a revolution in unmanned flight, including that of automatically piloted passenger airliners.

The RQ-4 is powered by an Allison Rolls-Royce AE3007H turbofan engine with 31.4 kN (3,200 kgf / 7,050 lbf) thrust, and carries a payload of 900 kilograms (2,000 pounds). The fuselage is mostly of conventional aluminum airframe construction, while the wings are made of carbon composite.

The Global Hawk costs about $35 million USD each[2] (actual per-aircraft costs; with development costs also included, the per-aircraft cost rises to $123.2 million USD each[3]).

Development



The first seven aircraft were built under the Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration (ACTD) program, in order to evaluate the design and its capabilities. Due to world circumstances, the capabilities of the aircraft were in high demand, so the prototype aircraft were operated in theater in the War in Afghanistan.

In an unusual move, the aircraft entered initial low-rate production concurrently while still in engineering and manufacturing development. Nine production Block 10 aircraft (sometimes referred to as RQ-4A configuration) were produced, two of which were transferred to the Navy (see below). Two more were sent to Iraq to support operations there. The final Block 10 aircraft was delivered on June 26, 2006.[7]

In order to increase the aircraft's capabilities, the airframe was redesigned, with the nose section and wings being stretched. The changes, with the designation RQ-4 Block 20, allow the aircraft to carry up to 3,000 pounds of internal payload. These changes were introduced with the first Block 20 aircraft, the 17th Global Hawk produced, which was rolled out in a ceremony on August 25, 2006.[8] First flight of the Block 20 from the USAF Plant 42 in Palmdale, CA to Edwards AFB took place on March 1, 2007. Developmental testing of Block 20 is scheduled for 2007 and 2008. Future Block 30 and 40 aircraft, similar in size to the Block 20, are scheduled for development from 2008 to 2010. [9]


Cost overruns
Program development cost overruns had put the Global Hawk system at risk of cancellation. Per-unit costs in mid-2006 were 25% over baseline estimates, caused by both the need to correct design deficiencies as well as increase the system's capabilities. This caused some concerns about a possible congressional termination of the program if its national security benefits could not be justified.[10][11] However, in June 2006, the Global Hawk program was restructured. Completion of an operational assessment report by the Air Force was slipped due to manufacturing and development delays from August 2005 to November 2007. The operational assessment report was released in March 2007 and production of the 54 air vehicles planned has been extended by two years to 2015.[12]


United States Navy
The U.S. Navy took delivery of two of the Block 10 aircraft to be used to evaluate maritime surveillance capabilities, designated N-1. The initial example, tail number 166509, was tested in a naval configuration at Edwards Air Force Base for several months, later ferrying to NAS Patuxent River on March 28, 2006 to begin the Global Hawk Maritime Demonstration (GHMD) program. Navy squadron VX-20 was tasked with operating the GHMD system.[13][14] [15]

In the spring of 2006, the GHMD aircraft took part in a demonstration of the type's ability to conduct maritime drug interdiction surveillance, completing four flights over the Caribbean and off the coast of Florida, locating and identifying numerous airborne and surface targets.[16]

The GHMD aircraft flew in the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise for the first time in July, 2006. Although RIMPAC operations were in the vicinity of Hawaii, the aircraft was operated from Edwards, requiring flights of approximately 2,500 miles each way to the operations area. Four flights were performed, resulting in over 24 hours of persistent maritime surveillance coordinated with USS Abraham Lincoln and Bonhomme Richard. As a part of the demonstration program, Global Hawk was tasked with maintenance of maritime situational awareness, contact tracking, and imagery support of various exercise operations. The imagery obtained by Global Hawk was transmitted to NAS Patuxent River for processing before being forwarded on to the fleet operations off Hawaii, thus exercising the global nature of this aircraft's operations.[17]

Northrop Grumman has offered a version of the RQ-4B for the Navy's Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) UAV contract competition.


NASA
Once the Air Force has finished with the ACTDs, the aircraft are due to be transferred to NASA for use by the NOAA. The plan is to attach probes, which contain weather analysis instruments, to the wings of the Global Hawk and drop them at high altitudes every day for 10 years to collect evidence for global warming.



"EuroHawk"



Luftwaffe
 
EuroHawk mock-up at the ILA 2006The German Luftwaffe has been investigating a variant of the RQ-4B equipped with European sensors, dubbed EuroHawk. It would combine a normal RQ-4B airframe with an EADS reconnaissance payload.

The aircraft is based on the Block 20/30/40 RQ-4B, but will be equipped with EADS' SIGINT package to fulfil Germany's desire to replace their aging Dassault-Breguet Atlantique electronic surveillance aircraft. A first batch of 5 EuroHawks will be delivered for the Luftwaffe from 2010 on.

The costs for the initial five aircraft are approx. €430 million for the development, and €430 million for the actual procurement.


Royal Australian Air Force
Australia is considering the purchase of a number of Global Hawk aircraft for maritime and land surveillance. The Global Hawk will be assessed against the RQ-1 Mariner in trials planned for 2007.[18] If selected, the Global Hawk aircraft will be operated by 10 & 11 Squadrons, in conjunction with P-8A Poseidon aircraft. Which will replace AP-3C Orion aircraft in 2018.


Canadian Forces
Canada is also a potential customer, looking at the Global Hawk for maritime and land surveillance as either a replacement for its fleet of CP-140 Aurora patrol aircraft or to supplement manned patrols of remote Arctic and maritime environments.


Republic of Korea
South Korea's Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) has continuously expressed interest in acquiring at least four RQ-4B and support equipment by 2011, and has allocated approximately USD$19m, to increase the intelligence capabilities of the South Korean military after the return of the Wartime Operational Control from the U.S. to ROK.


Miniature variant
Scaled Composites and Northrop Grumman are also offering a 50% proportional shrink of the RQ-4A, currently known as the Model 396, as part of the USAF Hunter-Killer program.


In operation
Air Force Global Hawk flight test evaluations are performed by the 452nd Flight Test Squadron at Edwards AFB. Operational aircraft are flown by the 9th Reconnaissance Wing at Beale Air Force Base.

Global Hawk ATCD prototypes have been used in the War in Afghanistan and in the Iraq War. While their data-collection capabilities have been praised, the aircraft did suffer a high number of accidents, with two of the aircraft, more than one quarter of the aircraft used in the wars, being lost. According to Australian press reports, the crashes were due to "technical failures or poor maintenance", with a failure rate per hour flown over 100 times higher than the F-16 fighters flown in the same wars. The manufacturers stated that it was unfair to compare the failure rates of a mature design to that of a prototype plane, and pointed to a lack of trained maintenance staff and spare parts.

On April 24, 2001 a Global Hawk flew non-stop from Edwards Air Force Base in the US to RAAF Base Edinburgh in Australia, making history by being the first pilotless aircraft to cross the Pacific Ocean. The flight took 22 hours.[19]

The Global Hawk Maritime Demonstration program has seen two aircraft delivered to the United States Navy, with the second making a delivery flight in December 2006 to its duty station at NAS Patuxent River in Maryland. The two aircraft are involved in a program to develop sensors, operational tactics, and procedures for integrating operations with manned aircraft at sea, for use in a maritime surveillance role[20].


Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RQ-4_Global_Hawk

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Kregener
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« Reply #1 on: December 10, 2007, 08:39:23 AM »

Pack that baby with high explosives, and it could make a hole even in re-enforced concrete buildings.

Hey....wait a minute...
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wvoutlaw2002
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« Reply #2 on: December 10, 2007, 10:07:36 PM »

I read this just a few minutes ago on infowars.com. Ever done research on BAE Systems? I was looking up Sanders Associates earlier today on Wikipedia because I remember Alex saying that video games were created by the military, and there is TOTAL truth in that (created at Sanders Associates, which was a military electronics firm now owned by BAE Systems).
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