The Sikorsky Cypher UAV

The Cypher, a ducted rotor UAV airplane with a composite shroud structure, fly-by-wire controls, integrated aeronautics, and an aboard mission laptop. This UAV is equipped with a range of payloads, like detector packages, with a weight up to forty lbs. The symmetrical, rounded shroud safely encloses the rotor system, and produces a stealthy signature. The vehicle will operate autonomously per a preplanned mission or below communication system via a data-link  Cypher incorporates a hover capability, 3 hour flight endurance, and its high speed of seventy knots permits flights up to twenty five kilometers.

Flight demonstrations of the Cypher technology demonstrator craft were conducted by the sikorsky craft corporation. Intended for military and civil applications. These demonstrations embrace capabilities like ground and armed service police investigation, communications relay and countermeasures missions, non-defense roles as counter-narcotics, ordnance disposal, forestry, utilities, enforcement and search and rescue.

The Cypher UAV is 6.5 feet in diameter. It combines the potency of a ducted airstream with a homocentric advancing blade idea rotor system. The rotors and also the circular shroud that encloses them can share in providing carrying capacity. Powered by a 50-horsepower category engine, Cypher UAVs are able to cruise at eighty knots, for up to 3 hours, with a ceiling of 8,000 feet. Cypher shares each automatic target detection and fly-by-wire control systems with the Boeing industrialist RAH-66 Comanche chopper being developed for the military.

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Cypher UAV
Photo: paper-replika.com

As an autonomous, or “smart” air vehicle, Cypher holds position and navigates employing a differential world Positioning System. The air vehicle is in a position to fly “hands-off,” rather than being flown directly by a ground operator. It additionally showed a capability to land remotely, camera-directed by its aboard tv, on slopes as high as fifteen degrees. Confined space operations showed it kicking off and landing between obstructions even twelve feet apart.

The enclosed rotor idea developed by sikorsky is safer than exposed UAV rotor systems. The Cypher style, with the rotor system within a shroud, minimizes the hazard of exposed high speed rotor blades to ground personnel. The Cypher incorporates composite structures, bearing-less rotors, fly-by-wire flight controls, advanced aeronautics. It works plainly and utilizes a centralized laptop, known as the vehicle mission processor, for execution of flight control laws, vehicle management functions, direction computations, flight payload management and air vehicle communications.

Cypher’s UAV autonomous flight modes are auto take-off and landing, position hover-hold, altitude hold, rate hold, way-point navigation and UAV return-home. Implementation of the return-home mode permits the operator to command the vehicle back to the first launch location – or the other preset location – with simply a push of the button.

The Cypher vehicle is controlled and monitored from an integrated mobile ground station. The whole mission is planned, operated and monitored from one system manager monitor. Vehicle and payload commands, from the system manager, are relayed to the UAV airplane via a digital telemetry transmission. UAV altitude  mission knowledge, surveillance knowledge and payload video are incorporated into one downlink signal that’s transmitted to the management van.

The air vehicle accumulated over four hundred flight hours at Sikorsky’s Development Flight Center in West Palm Beach, Fla., and at various U.S.government demonstrations.

In a demonstration at the Military Operations in Urban Terrain (MOUT) site at Fort Benning, Ga., Cypher flew down streets, landed on a building’s roof and strategically placed varying payloads. For the U.S. Army’s Autonomous Rotorcraft Testbed (ASRT) program, Cypher – with no operator input – searched and tracked man-size targets. For the U.S. Department of Energy, Cypher used magnetometers to go looking and find underground structures and tunnels in Nevada. In Sep 1997, Cypher flew at the Army’s Force Protection equipment Demonstration in Virginia.

Other Cypher demonstrations enclosed flights at Indiana’s test bed for detection of loaded ordinance and also the Army personnel college at Fort McClellan, Ala., wherever the UAV took part during a drug interdiction exercise.

The multi-use Security and surveillance Mission Platform (MSSMP), started in FY’92 because the Air-Mobile Ground Security and closed-circuit television (AMGSSS), was intended to produce a fast deployable, extended-range police investigation capability for a range of operations and missions, including: readying, force protection, plan of action security, support to counter-drug and patrol operations, signal/communications relays, detection and assessment of barriers (i.e., mine fields, tank traps), remote assessment of suspected contaminated areas (i.e., chemical, biological, and nuclear), and even resupply of little quantities of crucial things. The MSSMP system consists of 3 air-mobile remote sensing packages and a base station.

The MSSMP detector packages could operate as transportable complete units, or from air-mobile platforms. the present style of the air-mobile platforms is based on the Sikorsky Cypher enclosed-rotor vertical-take-off-and-landing Unmanned air vehicle. This air-mobile platform carries its detector package from one ground surveillance location to a different, up to ten kilometre from the original station.

A portable mission payload Beta package was developed by a team of SSC engineers and scientists, and a further payload package was integrated onto the Cypher vehicle by Sikorsky and SSC engineers. In May 1996, the system was successfully shown at the military college at ft. McClellan, AL, during a simulated counter-drug operation. The portable detector package mounted on a ground vehicle-of-opportunity and also the Cypher-mounted detector package were both operated at the same time over a similar radio network.

In January 1997, the MSSMP system’s continued role was shown during Military Operation in Urban areas situation at the Dismounted Battlespace Battle Laboratory, Ft. Benning, Georgia. The system showed reconnaissance support with the vehicle flying down town streets, searching through upper- and lower-story windows, providing lookout support prior to advancing troops, and performing observations when landing on the roof of a 2 story building. The vehicle additionally dropped a simulated radio relay on the highest of a building, a miniature intrusion detector in an open field, and carried a customary Army optical device rangefinder/designator as a payload.

The AMGSSS idea grew from NRaD’s expertise with the ground Air Telerobotic System (GATERS) program, initiated in 1986 by the United States Marine Corps. NRaD (then the Naval Ocean Systems Center (NOSC)) was the principle development agent on the system. GATERS consisted of a land-based, Tele-Operated Vehicle (TOV) and the Airborne Remotely Operated Device (AROD). The TOV was developed to perform remote reconnaissance/surveillance with fire and target designation/ranging capabilities. The TOV supported a High-Mobility-Multi-Wheeled-Vehicle (HMMWV) platform while AROD provided mobile intelligence reconnaissance. The TOV used a fiber-optic communications link to produce the required bandwidth in non-line-of-sight operations. The military users did not need to be encumbered with the fiber-optic tethers and preferred that one operator be able to supervise many remote systems.

The AROD was a ducted fan VTOL air vehicle that would easily translate through the air and supply aerial surveillance. The AROD was controlled from a mobile ground control station over a fiber-optic data-link, with a radio link as a back up. AROD had shorter flight endurance and payload capabilities. The AMGSSS idea marries the fast quality and low-data-rate management aspects of VTOL platforms with the long endurance reconnaissance capabilities of the unmanned ground vehicles.

Northrop Grumman Bat UAS (formerly KillerBee)

killerbee uav airplane
Photo: robotliving.com

Northrop Grumman has been working on a series of low flying unmanned aerial vehicles; they have named this project the Northrop Grumman Bat (formerly Swift Killerbee). They are being developed for the USAF, USMC, US Navy, and the US department of Defense. The Bat is capable of carrying a 30lb payload that is unmatched on UAV’s with a 10ft wingspan. In March of 2006 the Killerbee was test flown in Nevada by Swift engineering for the USAF where it met approval by their representatives. The partnership between Northrop Grumman and Swift Engineering ended in 2007 when Northrop Grumman took over the UAS family and introduced the Bat later in their development.

The UAS system only requires two people to fully operate the UAV. Advanced automation of the system makes operation easy. The UAV can be automatically recovered into a net. GCS software allows for reduced operator workload and thus less human error factor. The Bat UAV is launched into the air by a catapult, the functions of the catapult are monitored by the GCS software making user input less necessary. The airframe is made largely of high tech composites making the airplane extremely strong at a light weight. Bat systems with the current engine under development will be able to be in the air up to 15 hours at a time with a payload of 30lbs. Top speed of the Bat is 105 km/h. The Bat’s unique design gives it a lower visual and radar profile making it stealth-like. The payload consists of still-image and real time video-cameras. Also possible are EO/IR and SAR sensors, laser range finders and designators, infra-red cameras, communication equipment, and flare dispensers.

With the ability to carry a 30lb payload on such a small UAV there are a lot of possibilities for this aircraft in the future. Nothrop Grumman has picked up on a great project and I can’t even imagine the possibilities of this aircraft in the future with newer technology. This aircraft is also thought of something that could be used as a private security measure, border patrol, and to monitor local pipelines and electrical lines.

Dragon Eye Miniature UAV

         The Dragon Eye is five-pound, easily carried in a back-pack, UAV providing aerial patrolling and surveillance for branches of the military such as the US Marine Corps at low tactical units levels. Dragon Eye’s have  twin electric engines that run on battery power with little to no noise. It is flown independently at an altitude of 150m’. The Dragon Eye weighs in at 2.5 kg, the camera and equipment  weighs 1 pound. It is reported that The US Marines Corps are planning to obtain a more enhanced version of The Dragon-Eye,  better known as model X-63.
            The system its self can be conveniently carried in your average backpack, and can be disassembled into five sections and carried with the 5 kg control station. It has the ability to be assembled in the field within ten minutes. Dragon Eye’s is constructed using lightweight Styrofoam-like materials. It has a wingspan of 18 cm once full assembled and weighs about five pounds. The intended missions is then programmed on the control station and transmitted, via wireless modem,  to the UAV. The UAV can be launched either  by a bungee cords or by hand. After launch it reaches a cruise altitude and navigates via GPS. The camera is mounted on the fuselage side and is capable of transmitting live video to a ground station 10 km away, utilizing line-of-sight video data link. Less than a week’s training is required for a solider to be able to operate the system.
           
uav micro
           

(Photo by defense-update)
            Above is the Dragon Eye system consisting of two air vehicles, four cameras, two replacement noses and one ground control station. The estimated cost of the entire system at full rate production is approximately $60,000-70,000.Further development and testing still awaits  the Dragon Eye such as the addition of a high-resolution 640 x 480 infrared camera, development of a communications relay payload, a communications system, and experimentation with alternate power supplies and air vehicle design to improve endurance. A prototype zinc-air battery  has already been tested on the unmanned drone.
           
  Air vehicle: 2.5 kg
  Wing span: 18 cm
  GCS – 6 kg
  Endurance: 60 minutes
  Cruise speed: 65 km/h
            Aerovironment is currently developing an enhanced version based on requirements and operational feedback from combat units operating the drone. The Dragon Eye UAV Upgrade, also known as X-63, will receive air frame changes as well as improved power sources increasing its capability’s. It will also receive an autopilot for improved landing accuracy and in-flight navigation, and a new sensor payload with an IR and zoom camera that will providing true day/night capability. The system will have a new Level-4 compliant communications control board with 16 software selectable channels for uplink and downlink.

Here’s a video of the GCS

Ground control station for the Predator Drone suite.