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.

Silverfox UAV (BAE systems)

I promised you some information on BAE systems Silver Fox UAV airplane and today I bring it to you! This UAV is capable of autonomous aerial surveillance imaging at a cost effective price. With the ability to carry sensor payloads of four pounds and being able to transmit real time video images directly to a ground station; this unmanned system has a lot going for it! A single ground station can operate up to ten units. The Silver Fox unmanned airplane system was originally developed by Advanced Ceramics Research and was later purchased by BAE in 2009. The airplane is powered by a gas/electric system and weighs about 30lbs. It has the ability to carry infrared and electro-optical systems giving it the capability to provide full-motion imagery for 24 hour surveillance. The UAV carries small payloads performs fully autonomous take-offs and landings. Supporting military operations for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance this UAV can do much more than one task.
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A Silver Fox UAV on a launching platform
Photo: baesystems.com
The Silver Fox is made of a modular structure and is powered by a small model airplane piston engine. The airframe has the ability to be equipped with wings of various sizes. This allows it to trade duration and payload weight for speed or weight carrying capacity. Normally launched by hand this UAV airplane also has the ability to be launched by a compressed-air launcher. GPS navigation is used to make this UAV airplane to fly full-autonomous missions of up to ten hours. The mission is pre-planned using the laptop computer employed in the ground control station. The GCS has a limitation due to its data-link being line-of-sight but ranges up to 20nm are possible. A typical altitude for the Silver Fox to fly its mission at is 500-1200ft above the ground. Ceiling limitation for the unmanned airplane is about 12,000 feet. Currently sensors for video imaging are equipped but with a payload capacity of 4 pounds anything is possible.
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Silver Fox UAV in flight
Photo: baesystems.com
Development of this unmanned airplane is still continuing, mainly in the field of new sensors to be used with the system. Sensors can include biological and chemical agent detectors. Another sensor being tested is an improved camera system with automatic recording capabilities, swiveling, and improved zoom abilities. When data recording is enabled the Silver Fox is expected to be able to fly automatic missions of up to 180 miles. The latest information I’ve found says that the new flight control system supports a fully autonomous “convoy reconnaissance” mode. In this mode the UAV automatically flies ahead of a control vehicle in the convoy. With future improvements including a diesel engine, the flight time could be increased all the way up to 20 hours. 

Boeing X-45 combat UAV

Built by Boeing Integrated Defense Systems the Boeing X-45 is part of the J-UCAS project for the next generation of military aircraft that are completely autonomous. It took its first flight on may 22 2002, however there have only been two of these  concept demonstrators built. The craft sports a very low profile dorsal intake, a stream line center fuselage, swept lambda wing, no vertical control surface and minuet exhaust. The X-45 was developed using research from the development of the Bird of Prey, however they have eliminated the pilot and requirements of such in favor of autonomous piloting which takes a chunk out of the total cost of the aircraft.


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Photo: Jim Ross, NASA
            Phantom works created the first model of two models of the X-45A, in September of 2000. at Edwards Air Force Base, the X-45A successfully had its first bomb run test hitting the ground target with  a 250-pound inert precision-guided munition. The X-45′s goal was to “conduct suppression of enemy air defense missions with unmanned combat air vehicles.” The technology demonstrator program was designed with air to ground roles in mind as well as air to air capabilities. The National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is were both X-45A’s have resided since 2006 after their flight test program completion.

Photo: defence.pk
            The next project the X-45C Boeing modified to have even more fuel capacity and three times greater combat range then the X-45A.The X-45C also had a greater wing area and a platform similar to the B-2 Spirits. The autonomous aerial refueling of the X-45C was Boeing’s goal to reach by 2010, using a KC-135 Stratotanker. However, the US Air Force decided not to continue with the X-45 project on March 2, 2006.

Wait, so I can buy my own UAVs?

Today I will bring you some information about quadcopters! These relatively new MAVs (Miniature unmanned vehicles) have great potential to be used world wide. With relatively small size and the ability to “perch and stare” these devices could provide surveillance for a variety of things. The best part is, you can buy one too! Quad-copters sell for less than a $1000 with all equipment included. I’ve even seen people at my school fly these around with a camera attached, not even watching the vehicle from the ground. These look like tons of fun and I’d love to fly one sometime.
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An example of how torque is displaced on a quadcopter
Sourc: wikipedia.com

Due to the unique nature of these devices the torque of the propellers must be reversed on the x and y-axis. This can help with stability during flight. You may be asking, how do these devices even turn, and the answer is realtively simple. With each motor controlled by an ESC (Electronic Speed controller) they can be increased or decreased in power extremely fast, which when paired with a receiver can cause the quad copter to rotate on its x, y, and z-axis. These quadcopters are extremely agile, with the ability to fly in formation to accomplish tasks.

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Parrot AR.Drone 2.0
Source: wikipedia.com
One of the first successful quad-copter designs for sale to civilians was the Parrot AR drone. The Parrot AR drone is a flying quadroter helicopter developed by the French company Parrot. This device is intended to be controlled by iOS devices (iphone, itouch, and ipad) and android devices (HTC hero, etc). The drone originally presented at the Las Vegas International Consumer Electronics Show in 2010 is made of plastic and foam and ended up being around 30cm long. It has 2 onboard cameras that can be seen through the controller screen. This all goes to show just how quickly UAVs are developing, I might go by the store and pick one of these bad boys up just to show you guys!

 

If you’re interested you can buy the Parrot Drone here:

Aeryon Scout UAV in use with the Libyan Rebels

An awesome video from youtube showing just how well these UAV’s can see to spy on Libyan Rebels