header banner
WORLD

Boeing, Australian air force say pilotless, fighter-like jet completed first test flight

SYDNEY, March 2: Boeing Co and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) said on Tuesday they had completed the first flight test on a pilotless fighter-like jet designed to operate in conjunction with crewed aircraft.
FILE PHOTO: A model of Boeing's pilotless, fighter-like jet, dubbed ;Loyal Wingman', is displayed in Avalon, Australia February 27, 2019. REUTERS/Jamie Freed/File Photo
By Reuters

SYDNEY, March 2: Boeing Co and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) said on Tuesday they had completed the first flight test on a pilotless fighter-like jet designed to operate in conjunction with crewed aircraft.


The “Loyal Wingman”, the first military aircraft to be designed and manufactured in Australia in more than 50 years, flew under the supervision of a Boeing test pilot monitoring it from a ground control station in South Australia.


The Australian government has invested A$40 million ($31 million) in development of the product, which Boeing has said could be customised for other global customers.


Related story

Flights expected to be disrupted for two hours due to calibrati...


Boeing’s Loyal Wingman is 38 feet long (11.6 metres), has a 2,000 nautical mile (3,704 km) range and a nose that can be removed to fit various payloads. It can carry weapons and act as a shield to help protect more expensive manned fighter jets.


Defence contractors are investing increasingly in autonomous technology as militaries around the world look for cheaper and safer ways to maximise their resources.


Britain in January signed a GBP 30 million ($42 million) contract with the Belfast unit of Spirit AeroSystems for a similar type of pilotless aircraft to have a trial flight in the next three years.


During the test flight in Australia, the Loyal Wingman took off under its own power before flying a pre-determined route at different speeds and altitudes to verify its functionality and demonstrate the performance of the design.


The first Loyal Wingman is being used as a foundation for Boeing’s Airpower Teaming System, a service being developed for various global defence customers.


Boeing said additional Loyal Wingman aircraft are currently under development, with plans for teaming flights scheduled for later this year.


The plane maker has previously said up to 16 of the Loyal Wingman jets could be teamed with a crewed aircraft for missions.


 

Related Stories
WORLD

Pilot killed in Pakistan Air Force F-16 crash in I...

WORLD

Cockpit voice recorder of doomed Lion Air jet depi...

WORLD

Indonesia finds cockpit voice recorder of crashed...

ECONOMY

Pokhara International Airport: First flight on Pok...

WORLD

Boeing 737 slides into Florida river with 136 on b...