May 9, 2008 10:48 AM PDT

Photos of Watchkeeper UAV released

(Credit: Thales UK)

Thales UK released photos of the new Watchkeeper UAV maiden flight in Northern Israel after permission to publish the pictures had been blocked for three weeks because of political considerations, according to industry press reports.

The Watchkeeper, a "fully autonomous" (including automatic takeoff and landing) unmanned aerial vehicle, is expected to assume reconnaissance and target acquisition duties for the British military by 2010, according to Thales.

The robo-platform comes equipped with day/night electro-optic sensors, laser-target designators, and advanced synthetic aperture radar. Information and images collected are transmitted to a network of mobile ground control stations and remote viewing terminals where operators can control missions. It's unarmed but does include a "de-icing capabilit."

Permission to publish the pictures had been blocked by the U.K. Defence Equipment & Support organization since the April 16 maiden flight, according to Flightglobal.com, "due to sensitivities linked to local elections held across the U.K. on 1 May."

The 450-kilogram Watchkeeper, based on the Elbit Hermes 450, will be built jointly by the Israeli company Elbit Systems and the French-owned Thales UK. Starting price was 15 million pounds (more than $29 million) but has reportedly risen to 17 million pounds a pop (more than $33 million), and despite 2,100 lucrative jobs, a good portion of that money will be flying away offshore. There's one reason to be sensitive.

advertisement
 
Discover unlimited music for the price of one CD a month
Recent posts from Military Tech
Photos of Watchkeeper UAV released
The fungus among us takes on depleted uranium
Robots to swarm English village in huge contest
Terrorist threat rewrites the book on biowar
Mig downs drone
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments (Page 1 of 1)
by CO4E May 11, 2008 11:58 AM PDT
We are losing another word from the English lexicon. These vehicles are "unmanned". Autonomous means self-directed, or no external control. An autonomous weapon would require only permission to engage, and it would know when to ask for it.
Reply to this comment
by kadirkalican May 11, 2008 12:17 PM PDT
hhh
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
Click Here
  • About Military Tech

  • The military establishment's ever increasing reliance on technology and whiz-bang gadgetry impacts us as consumers, investors, taxpayers and ultimately as the "defended." Our mission here is to bring some of these products and concepts to your attention based on carefully selected criteria such as importance to national security, originality, collateral damage to the treasury and adaptability to yard maintenance-but not necessarily in that order.

    Mark Rutherford is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

    Disclosure.

Add this feed to your online news reader
Google
Yahoo
MSN
advertisement
On TV.com: MILEY CYRUS photographs
Visit other CNET Networks sites: