Robot bomber successfully tested

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Preacherman

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I wasn't sure where to post this, but since bombers have traditionally been the "biggest gun" available (at the end of a radio :D ), I guess it will fit here...

From MSNBC (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4779727/):

Robot plane drops bomb in test

Another step for remote-control warfighting

Jim Ross / NASA via AP

Updated: 4:46 p.m. ET April 19, 2004


040419_combatdrone_hmed10a.hmedium.jpg

A Boeing Joint Unmanned Combat Air System X-45 aircraft releases an inert GPS-guided bomb Sunday at the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division range in China Lake, Calif.


LOS ANGELES - A robotic plane deliberately dropped a bomb near a truck at Edwards Air Force Base on Sunday, marking another step forward for technology the U.S. military hopes will one day replace human pilots on dangerous combat missions.

Under human supervision but without human piloting, a prototype of the Boeing Co.’s X-45 took off from the desert base, opened its bomb bay doors, dropped a 250-pound (114-kilogram) Small Smart Bomb and then landed.

The inert bomb struck within inches of the truck it was supposed to hit, Boeing said, adding that had the bomb contained explosives, the target would have been destroyed.

“It’s absolutely a huge step forward for us. It shows the capability of an unmanned airplane to carry weapons,†said Rob Horton, Boeing’s chief operator for the mission. “From the video, you see the weapon going down and a huge cloud of dust and the truck shaking around.â€

The X-45A was preprogrammed with the target coordinates and used the satellite-based Global Positioning System to adjust its course.

Horton, who was sitting 80 miles (130 kilometers) from the target, authorized the drone to drop the bomb, which was released from 35,000 feet (10,670 meters) as the plane flew at 442 mph (700 kilometers per hour).

The military sees such aircraft taking part in its most dangerous missions, such as bombing enemy radar and surface-to-air missile batteries, in order to clear the path for human pilots.

The Y-shaped, tailless plane has a 34-foot (10.4-meter) wingspan and weighs 8,000 pounds (3,600 kilograms) empty. It is the first drone designed specifically to carry weapons into combat.

Other robotic planes, including the Predator spy drone currently being used in Afghanistan, have been modified to carry weapons.

Boeing hopes to build hundreds of the X-45 planes, which would cost $10 million to $15 million each.
 
Some Global Hawks floating high above Iraq looking for some activity with a few robot bombers waiting for a mission - night and day. You could have some control centers spaced around the globe so no controller is tired from working at 0200.

I wonder if they'll get inflight refueling to work. I'm not sure how the tanker crew would handle a robot coming up on their tail.

Now we just need to hook those suckers up to SkyNet.
 
This is bad. We need soldiers of meat and bone, who can put a human face on the war. Everybody knows that only supervillains use robots. If we have wars with zero casualties, how will we know we're at war?

P.S. - Samurai Jack would kick that thing's butt.
 
At $15 million a pop you can build 20 of those for the cost of a single F-22A. I'm sure a stealth version could also be created.

For an interesting take on the issue of robotic warfare, try Joe Haldeman's Forever Peace. If no American lives are at stake, why not be in a perpetual state of war?

Of course, the islamofascists have made sure that we will be in a perpetual state of war. I say go for it.
 
I'm sure a stealth version could also be created.

X-45 IS a stealth (or near stealth "Low Observable") aircraft. notice the similarity in general planform to a B-2.

it's another blended contour flying wing, thing probably has the RCS (radar cross section, ie how well it shows up on radar) of a barn swallow or some such.


tech such as this WOULD be very helpful in time of war, not as a semi-autonomous tactical bomber but more along the lines of (as stated in part of teh article) an air defense supression platform. clear off the nasty stuff, or at least make the operators run for better cover, before and while the REAL strike passes through the area.
 
Another weapons system and another war-fighting doctrine based on GPS and satellite communications. This will work only up to the point where the US is fighting a technologically sophisticated opponent that can target a satellite (Russians, Chinese, Euro-backstabbers, etc.), IMO.
 
I can see AWACS controllers operating these little beasties in round-the-clock sorties.
 
it is only a matter of time before that which is intended to protect us is used to control us.
 
Good point. How long will it be before the war can be run from a bunker with a couple of Game Boy controllers?
 
Anyone remember the movie...(maybe it was just Outter limits? Where they recruted kids to play vidio games. Thing is the games were REAL. The kids were controling real robots and killing real people.
 
Anyone remember the movie...(maybe it was just Outter limits? Where they recruted kids to play vidio games. Thing is the games were REAL. The kids were controling real robots and killing real people.


there was a 7 days episode like this but people flew missiles instead of robots.
 
There are twenty-four or more satellites in the sky in the GPS system. How many would a guy haveta knock out before the system became unusable locally? And who's to say there aren't any backups up there, just waiting to come online...
 
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