AIR SHOW: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Come Of Age
June 15 2009 - 7:30AM
Dow Jones News
Unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAV's have been used for military
surveillance for decades, but only recently have they gained wider
acceptance as a safe and cost-effective addition to the aerospace
arsenal.
In coming years, technology developed for unmanned aircraft will
see more military use, and is likely to be adopted in the much
bigger commercial market as well.
For the first time this year, a UAV will be included with
official flight displays at the Paris Air Show, open Monday to the
trade and the media as it celebrates its 100th anniversary.
Even as the Camcopter S-100, an auto-piloted helicopter made in
Austria, goes through its paces at Le Bourget, a private airport
outside Paris, many manufacturers around the world are gearing up
for growing UAV sales.
In the U.S., Defense Secretary Robert Gates is looking for
safer, more efficient ways for the U.S. to fight wars. The defense
budget for fiscal 2010 backs UAVs with $5.3 billion, an 18%
increase from fiscal 2009, even as other programs lose funding.
"UAV's were used in World War II," says Gene Fraser, vice
president of the strike and surveillance systems division of
Northrop Grumman Corp.'s (NOC) Aerospace Systems unit. "But it's
like an actor who's been working for years and suddenly gets
discovered." He said more sophisticated technology is giving the
UAV market a boost.
Northrop makes the Global Hawk, an aircraft that was
fast-tracked into production for use in Iraq and Afghanistan.
High-end UAVs, which can stay in the air for as long as 50 hours,
are good for border patrol, as well as for military surveillance,
Fraser said. While the craft can cost about the same as a
conventional spy plane, substantial cost savings come from
eliminating flight training. And you can't put a price tag on
keeping pilots out of harm's way.
"The real upside for Northrop Grumman is with international
business, which now is very small," Fraser said. Northrop also is
test-flying - with the U.S. Navy and other partners - a stealthy,
unmanned combat vehicle that can operate more autonomously than
military drones now in use.
The Global Hawk is the first UAV that has been approved by the
U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to file commercial flight
plans, opening the door for use as a cargo or passenger plane.
Commercial UAV Market Ready For Takeoff
Last year, David Vos, founder and head of Athena Technologies,
sold the South African company to aircraft electronics maker
Rockwell Collins Inc. (COL). Vos said merging his company, a leader
in unmanned aircraft systems, with Rockwell Collins, portends a
future where unmanned technology will merge with controls
technology on military and commercial aircraft. For example,
Rockwell Collins is testing UAV equipment designed to automatically
recover control of a damaged aircraft, specifically, one that has
lost up to 60% of one wing.
Vos offered another scenario: If a plane were hijacked, someone
on the ground might be able to access the plane's automated control
system via the Internet and push a button to engage automated
controls that could safely land the aircraft.
Human concerns, including an uneasy flying public and aerospace
workers fearful of job losses, are the main impediment to wider use
of unmanned vehicles, Vos said. "There are ways to approach
game-changing technology that really annoy people, and then it goes
nowhere, or you can work constructively," he said.
At a press event Monday at the Paris Air Show, Vos will unveil
what Rockwell Collins believes is a constructive approach. The
company offers links to Web sites that demonstrate developing UAV
technology. Vos believes people will respond favorably. At the time
of the first Paris Air Show, "no one would have thought you could
ride on a train with no operator. Now it happens every time you go
to the airport, and you don't think a thing of it," Vos said.
-By Ann Keeton, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4120;
ann.keeton@dowjones.com