Mobile UPI  |   About UPI  |   UPI en Español  |   UPI Arabic  |   UPIU  |   My Account
Search:
Go

FAA OK's SAIC's SKYBUS UAS

Science Applications International Corporation said Monday it had received FAA approval for its SKYBUS 30K Airshi UAS.
|
|
 
  
Published: Aug. 7, 2007 at 1:27 PM
Advertisement

SAN DIEGO, Aug. 7 (UPI) -- Science Applications International Corp. said Monday it has received U.S. Federal Aviation Administration approval for its SKYBUS 30K Airship UAS.

The SKYBUS 30K Airship Unmanned Aerial System "was recently granted a Federal Aviation Administration U.S. Experimental Airworthiness Certificate for Unmanned Airships," SAIC said in a statement.

SAIC said it had functioned as lead system integrator for the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command and that it had teamed up with Telford Aviation Services of Bangor, Maine, "to develop and test the prototype at the Loring Unmanned Aircraft Systems Test Center in Limestone, Maine."

"The prototype SKYBUS 30K, with its 30,000 cubic-foot volume, is the initial testing and demonstration platform for a series of large airships," SAIC said. "The SKYBUS 30K has a 300 pound payload and can serve as a platform to carry sensors used for a variety of security and intelligence operations including border patrol, port security, survivor search, wildlife management and sports event monitoring."

SAIC said SKYBUS's airframe was "resilient to damage and includes a Lighter Than Air Unmanned Aerial System (LTA-UAS); ground control station for mission planning, flight monitoring, and in-flight profile amendment; and a mobile mooring system that allows the SKYBUS 30K to launch from confined or unimproved sites."

"The SKYBUS can loiter for 30 to 40 hours, can travel up to 35 knots, and has faint visual, radar, infrared, and acoustic signatures," it said.

SAIC said the SKBUS project was also developed with Aerospace Innovations, responsible for Lighter Than Air, or LTA, systems control; DRS-Unmanned Technologies, responsible for vehicle flight controls; Lindstrand USA, responsible for the vehicle primary envelop and flight structure; and Loring Development Activity, which functioned as the program's flight test facility.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
  
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
The 84th Academy Awards winners The breakout star of the Oscars The Daytona 500
Radiohead performs in Miami Ice and Snow Festival in China 2012 Governors Dinner
Additional Security Industry Stories
1 of 20
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Visited in Washington
View Caption
Veterans etch the names of their friends inscribed on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War on May 26, 2012 in Washington, DC. More than 58,000 names of the servicemen who were killed or missing in the war are engraved on The Wall. UPI/Pat Benic
fark
Andy Rooney's WWII scoop from Nov 7th, 1944: The day Nazi 'robot rockets' almost bombed New York...
Chances are, if you're growing a two foot tall marijuana plant in a pot outside your front door,...
Canadian hang-glider pilot says he's really sorry he dropped that poor tourist to her death, and...
In this day and age, the Golden Gate bridge would never be built, thanks to hipsters, enviro-nuts...
Dick Winters, a true American hero, immortalized with a statue in Normandy. It's about damn time...
Apparently Best Korean officials are suffering from contagious and deadly "traffic accidents"