Drones

Drones are robots, aircraft without pilots. They are the Next Big Thing, that is unless there is another one out there, which has not gone public yet. Some just buzz around spying on people. Others carry missiles such as the Hellfire, one that can spoil your day, what is left of it. At $68,000 apiece it is not cheap but then nothing military is. Now they are based in England. See e.g. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2290842/US-Drones-bombing-Africa-operated-RAF-bases-heart-Lincolnshire-countryside.html. The little toy ones are also fun to play with. They can  shut down major civil airfields, inconveniencing thousands. Someone did just that at Gatwick recently.

Build a Cruise Missile for $5K
Building your own cruise missile for US$5,000 may sound like a fantasy if you know how much the tax payers get screwed out of for anything airborne. It is not. $5,000 covers the parts and one objective was to buy them without getting noticed. It happened and a lot of them were exported from America to New Zealand without problems. The man doing this one has solid back ground in model aircraft, jet engines and computing.

 

Black Hornet Nano ex Wiki
The Black Hornet Nano is a military micro unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) developed by Prox Dynamics AS of Norway, and in use by the armed forces of the United States, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Turkey, Norway, the Netherlands and India.[1]

The unit measures around 10 × 2.5 cm (4 × 1 in) and provides troops on the ground with local situational awareness. They are small enough to fit in one hand and weigh just over half an ounce (18 g, including batteries).[2]

The UAV is equipped with a camera, which gives the operator full-motion video and still images. They were developed as part of a £20 million contract for 160 units with Marlborough Communications Ltd.[3][4][5]

An operator can be trained to operate the Black Hornet in as little as 20 minutes. The air vehicle has three cameras; one looking forward, one looking straight down, and one pointing downward at 45 degrees. A Black Hornet package contains two helicopters, and since a 90% charge is reached in 20-25 minutes, the same as its hovering time, when one needs to be recharged the other is ready to fly.[6] Top speed is 13 mph (21 km/h).[7]

In October 2014, Prox Dynamics unveiled a version of its PD-100 Black Hornet with night vision capabilities, fitted with both long-wave infrared and day video sensors that can transmit video streams or high-resolution still images via a digital data-link with a 1 mi (1.6 km) range. Over 3,000 Black Hornets had been delivered to date.[8]
PS The price they are getting away with is circa $200K, far too much for routine infantry operations.

 

Drones Are Out There Killing The Innocent
Politicians are out there denying everything. Politicians lie, kill, steal tax money, fornicate. Politicians are criminals.

 

General_Atomics_MQ-1_Predator
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d2/MQ-1_Predator_P1230014.jpg

 

Predator - a variant?

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a3/RQ-1_Predator.jpg

 

 Hellfire missile waiting to go. Notice the dish for the guidance system in the nose.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/AGM-114_Hellfire_hung_on_a_Predator_drone.JPEG

 

 

 

File:Predator and Hellfire.jpg

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7b/080709-F-2511J-105.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0f/RQ-1_Predator_in_Iraq_2006-05-04_F-0000R-004.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/UAV_Predator_Italian_Air_Force.JPG

 

This English one looks home made.
File:BAE-FURY-UAV.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d0/BAE-FURY-UAV.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/OCPA-2005-08-11-080331.jpg

 

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/70/MQ-9_Reaper_Satcom.jpg

 

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/85/MQ-9_Afghanistan_takeoff_1_Oct_07.JPG

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b0/MQ-9_Reaper_in_flight_%282007%29.jpg

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/MQ-9_Reaper_taxis.jpg

 

Hellfire
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Lockheed_Martin_Longbow_Hellfire.jpg

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northrop_Grumman_RQ-4_Global_Hawk
The Global Hawk costs about US$35 million to procure each aircraft.[3] With development costs included, the unit cost rises to US$218 million.[4]
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9d/Global_Hawk_1.jpg
A thing of joy and beauty? No, but it could be useful.

 

 


Drones In England [ 6 March 2013 ]
QUOTE
Drones are robots, aircraft without pilots. They are the Next Big Thing, that is unless there is another one out there, which has not gone public yet. Some just buzz around spying on people. Others carry missiles such as the Hellfire, one that can spoil your day, what is left of it. At $68,000 apiece it is not cheap but then nothing military is.
UNQUOTE
Are they spying on us yet? Pass. This one, a noisy, propeller driven job was seen near Salisbury Plain Training Area working low and slow with helicopters in attendance. This means it was also near Boscombe Down where experimental flying happens. They are concentrating on night flying to hide the truth from people.
PS This report comes from a correspondent. I.e. it is true, nothing to do with the Main Stream Media.

 

America Uses Drones To Murder 55 People In The Yemen [ 22 April 2014 ]
Some were Al Qaeda it seems, so that's all right.

 

Anti-Drone Sales Stunt Is A Brilliant Success    [ 10 January 2019 ]
QUOTE
Sky News has learnt several companies have been called to the London airport after departure flights were temporarily grounded on Tuesday evening.

One firm says it has technology that can detect, film and track a drone as well as pinpoint its operator. Reading-based Operational Solutions said the technology could be installed at any UK airport within 24 hours and cover the entire site within a week.

The Metropolitan Police is still hunting for the drone operator who caused Tuesday's disruption at Heathrow after the device was seen by several people - including police officers - shortly after 5pm
UNQUOTE
It can be done. It has been done. It should have been done at major civil airfields long ago. But English criminals have led the world, exposing Her Majesty's Government as grossly incompetent. To be fair  Theresa May is also doing that without the slightest assistance from anyone else. Sky News mentions one firm aiming to make megabucks out of the Gatwick Nausea.  Another is Liteye; it goes from Detect to Defeat in five [ 5 ] seconds, much better than the five days it took the deadbeats of the Civil Aviation Authority.

 

Drone Radars Should Have Been Used At Airports Sooner, Expert Warns After Gatwick Nausea [ 18 January 2019 ]
QUOTE
Radar systems capable of detecting drones have been available for years and should have been deployed at airports sooner, according to a Whitehall adviser.

Professor Iain Gray, chairman of the Drones Industry Action Group, said Gatwick’s drone chaos last month was not an ‘unforeseen incident’, adding that ‘many commentators have been talking for quite some time’ about the potential of disruption from drones near airports. Transport Secretary Chris Grayling [ a loud mouthed ignoramus ] has claimed there were currently no systems capable of protecting airports from the threat.
UNQUOTE
Professor Gray knows what he is talking about, unlike Grayling.

 

Gatwick Drone Nausea Cost EasyJet £10 Million            [ 23 January 2019 ]
The perpetrators are still out there, laughing up their sleeves and probably keeping very quiet about it.