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New trials for UAV auto-landing system

PARIS, Oct. 31 (UPI) -- French companies DCNS and Thales are planning supplementary technology demonstrations of a system for automatic ship deck landing of unmanned aerial vehicles.

The decision, they said, is the result of a go-ahead from the French Defense Procurement Authority -- a follow-on from the successful landing and deck-landing trials conducted in the United States last June and July using a moving platform.

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Sea trials of the demonstrator are planned for 2012 using a French Navy frigate and a Boeing H-6U Unmanned Little Bird rotorcraft.

The next trials are aimed at demonstrating automatic deck-landing of an unmanned aerial vehicle on the deck of a frigate in total safety even in a high sea and in low visibility.

DCNS and Thales said the system must demonstrate its capability for integration of all the operational constraints inherent in deck take-offs and landings, similar to those of piloted helicopters, but in fully automatic mode.

The D2AD automatic deck-landing system constitutes a key stage in the run-up to the use of UAV rotorcraft by naval forces, the companies said. The availability of an automatic on-board take-off and landing system, without the need for an external pilot, opens up the possibility of intensive use of UAV rotorcraft, at minimum cost and a high level of safety.

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Thales is responsible for the positioning system and its interface with the UAV system, the supply of a UAV demonstrator system and slaving of the flight path along a trajectory. DCNS is responsible for predicting the vessel motions, the harpoon system as well as the interface and integration with the vessel.

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