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August 11, 2009 2:38 PM PDT

Boeing looks to elevate its UAV game

by Jonathan Skillings
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Boeing A160T Hummingbird

The Marines are looking for a few good UAVs. Will Boeing's Hummingbird pass muster?

(Credit: Boeing)

Boeing this week is touting a pair of deals focused on unmanned aerial vehicles, both of them rotorcraft.

On Monday, the aerospace behemoth said that it's getting $500,000 from the U.S. Marines Corps that will go toward a project meant to demonstrate the cargo-hauling capabilities of Boeing's A160T Hummingbird. The Marines are looking into the possibility of dispatching unmanned aircraft as cargo carriers in place of trucks driven by flesh-and-blood troops.

By February, Boeing will have to demonstrate that, in six hours or less per day for three consecutive days, the 35-foot-long A160T can tote a 2,500-pound payload from one simulated forward operating base to another. The turbine-powered A160T, which can fly autonomously, debuted in 2007 and can cruise at 140 knots. Besides carrying supplies, it could also be equipped with surveillance gear.

In a test of its aerial prowess last summer, the A160T flew for 18.7 hours without refueling while carrying a 300-pound internal payload, and still had 90 minutes of fuel left in its tank. Boeing says that the flight, in May 2008, set a world endurance record for UAVs in its class.

Schiebel S-100 Camcopter

Austria's Schiebel Industries wants to land some deals for its S-100 Camcopter with buyers in the U.S.

(Credit: Schiebel Industries)

On Tuesday, Boeing announced a deal with Austria's Schiebel Industries to help market and support Schiebel's S-100 Camcopter, which the companies are touting as a "stabilized video system for surveillance and reconnaissance." Schiebel is keen to find customers in the U.S. government and military sectors, and Boeing of course is a defense contractor of long standing. (Schiebel says civilian customers are also welcome.)

The S-100, which has a rotary engine and can fly autonomously, has a data link range as great as 200 kilometers. The primary payload bay can handle up to about 100 pounds, though Schiebel says the standard payload is about half that, at which weight the S-100 flies for about 6 hours. The UAV is about 10 feet long and 3.5 feet high.

In June, Boeing established an Unmanned Airborne Systems division, in a sign of the growing importance of UAVs (or UASes, in Boeing's parlance) to its overall business. The division also oversees the smaller, fixed-wing ScanEagle UAV, which has been deployed with the Marines in Iraq, from Boeing's wholly owned InSitu subsidiary.

"This teaming agreement (with Schiebel) allows us to offer another quality unmanned airborne platform to customers who depend on the intelligence these aircraft can provide," Vic Sweberg, director of Boeing Unmanned Airborne Systems, said in a statement. "It will further enable our new division to deliver innovative solutions tailored to our customers' needs and budgets."

Jonathan Skillings is managing editor of CNET News, based in the Boston bureau. He's been with CNET since 2000, after a decade in tech journalism at the IDG News Service, PC Week, and an AS/400 magazine. He's also been a soldier and a schoolteacher. E-mail Jon.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by EvanSei August 11, 2009 4:01 PM PDT
Imaging what would happen if our enemies hacked these things!
Reply to this comment
by willdryden August 12, 2009 1:02 PM PDT
Imagine what could happen if a computer hacked one of them. Perhaps I've been watching too much Terminator but I've been worried about neural net computers since they were first invented.
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