Raytheon, Swift Engineering Team Again to Bid for Future USMC UAV

1841

Raytheon Company (NYSE:RTN) and Swift Engineering, Inc. announced the renewal of their teaming agreement in pursuit of the forthcoming U.S. Navy/Marine Corps Tier II/ Small Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System (STUAS). Two years ago the two companies teamed to compete for an earlier phase which was pushed back by the corps at least untill the next year.


The team, lead by Raytheon, will offer the KillerBee unmanned aerial vehicle, developed by Swift Engineering. Several Raytheon business units will provide products and services for the program, including the ground control system, C4ISR integration, and Mission Support. Optical Alchemy will provide payloads elements for the UAS. The team expects to leverage from extensive work undertaken by Raytheon, developing common Ground Control Systems (GCS), incorporating advancements realized from the development of Raytheon’s Multi-Vehicle Control System, capable of simultaneously controlling multiple, dissimilar vehicles. Based on standard NATO architecture (STANAG 4586) the system supports vehicle flight control and a visual presentation of flight data.

“KillerBee offers the warfighter an affordable unmanned aircraft system, and the Swift Engineering vehicle has both longer endurance and the ability to carry a larger payload,” said Ken Pedersen, Raytheon vice president of Advanced Programs. He noted that the team will offer proven technology to facilitate rapid fielding of the KillerBee in the near term. The KillerBee uses blended wing body design which sets it apart from similar sized unmanned aerial vehicles and is designed to operate ashore or aboard ships with a minimal footprint.

Through extensive air and ground testing, Swift claims that KillerBee has demonstrated performance outperforming any vehicle in its class. Control, processing and display functions were validated, and demonstrated suitability for naval and marine corps applications. The companies plan to continue flight testing throughout 2008, to ensure matured readiness level of the entire KillerBee system. Ongoing flight tests have demonstrated the integrated architecture that includes the hosting of the vehicle specific module in the aircraft mission computer, further validating the STANAG 4586 architecture, and the KJ-640 electro optical-infrared sensor system.