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UK unveils Taranis Stealth Combat Aircraft

Lankan Ranger

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UK unveils Taranis Stealth Combat Aircraft

The UK has lifted the covers off its Taranis unmanned combat air system technology demonstrator, which will be flown for the first time in 2011.

Revealed at BAE Systems' Warton site in Lancashire on 12 July, Taranis is the product of a more than £140 million ($210million) project involving the UK Ministry of Defence and an industry team including BAE, GE Aviation, Qinetiq and Rolls-Royce.

The development programme was launched in December 2006, and is intended to prove the UK's ability to produce a stealthy UCAS while maintaining sovereign capability over its technologies and equipment.

"We have no dependencies on others beyond the UK," says Nigel Whitehead., group managing director of BAE's Programmes and Support operating unit. Should an operational requirement stem from the Taranis effort, a system could possibly be available in the 2018-20 period, he adds.

Air Chief Marshal Simon Bryant, commander-in-chief of the Royal Air Force's Air Command organisation, says a future UCAS could meet three of the service's key operating needs. These cover control of the air, attack and intelligence/situational awareness, he adds.

However, any future need hinges on the outcome of the Strategic Defence and Security Review, which will conclude around October.

Whitehead confirms that Team Taranis has encountered "significant integration challenges" during the programme to date, citing areas such as aerodynamics, engine and systems integration and the demands of manufacturing a low-observable structure.

"A number of these technologies have been looked at before, but not all brought together in one platform," he says.

BAE has now invested more than £100 million in developing unmanned systems technology such as those needed to support autonomous operations, he adds.

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PICTURES: UK unveils Taranis stealth combat demonstrator
 
Correct me if im wrong, but didnt their PM say he was going to slash the defence spending budget by a considerable ammount? If so, then how will the support this?
 
Correct me if im wrong, but didnt their PM say he was going to slash the defence spending budget by a considerable ammount? If so, then how will the support this?

The project was announced as early as 2005, so the allocation might have done at that time.
 
The project was announced as early as 2005, so the allocation might have done at that time.

Cheers, it sounds like an amazing project. Lets hope the present government sees it benifit for their almost dead defence industry.
 
and may they offer this in response of RFI issued..
 
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Secrets of Next-Generation British Stealth Plane Revealed


FOXNews.com - Secrets of Next-Generation British Stealth Plane Revealed


Taranis%20Rolls%20Out_604x341.jpg


A high-tech British roboplane capable of attacking targets as far away as Afghanistan was unveiled by defense contractor BAE Systems in the U.K. Monday.

The prototype roboplane, named Taranis after the Celtic god of thunder, took four years to build and cost £143 million ($215 million).

The plane is unique in that it can fly itself, without piloting from the ground. It is equipped with two internal bomb bays to carry a wide range of weapons.

It can also attack intercontinental targets, meaning it could launch an attack from the U.K. on targets as far away as Afghanistan. Nigel Whitehead, BAE's managing director for programs, said the plane's biggest technological advantage was its ability to fly without intervention from the ground.

He said most unmanned planes were controlled by pilots on the ground, but that the Taranis could fly itself and evade radar detection.

"You can tell it what to do, give it alternatives, change the mission in flight -- and it is smart enough to do it itself and make choices," he said. "You can also intervene if something goes wrong."

BAE Systems won the contract to build the Taranis four years ago. The company's goal was to build an unmanned aircraft capable of covert intelligence gathering.

Taranis will commence flight tests in 2011, and BAE hopes that the British Ministry of Defence will purchase the planes for service with the Royal Air Force.
 
Looks like a winner!

This one and the X-45-47 UCAV's are just the beginning of the future of air warfare. As Computing power increases and gets smaller in size. It will be amazing what we will see being developed even 10 years from now.
 
The UK can't afford it £143million is alot of money, especially with the tories are cutting down on everything including the defence budget.

...... :toast_sign:
 
What it also means in retrospect is the greater pool of aspiring pilots. Those who are physically unfit in some areas but display considerable flying aptitude now have the chance to fulfill their dreams.
 
The country is nearly broke read up for those members that seem to be lol away..
 
ha ha ha nice man!!!!!!1really nice!!!uk cant afford it.:partay::rofl::rofl::agree:

143 million for 1 aircraft that's like 214 billion dollars.
Even the US with it's huge defence budget might cancel the f-22 program.
 
looks cool, i am glad that for once some country other than USA has been able to incorporate such cutting edge technology into an air craft.
 

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