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Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
http://www.livescience.com/49259-navy-helicopter-drone-tests.html |
Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
On 12/25/2014 12:24 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
http://www.livescience.com/49259-navy-helicopter-drone-tests.html This is not the first attempt at flying drones from a Navy vessel. The first ship I was assigned to in 1969 had the DASH system installed, including the required flight deck and hanger. DASH wasn't all that successful primarily due to the primitive control and communication electronics available at the time. The DASH equipment was removed and the hanger was converted into additional sleeping quarters for members of a (then classified) special projects group of which I was a member. We were tasked with testing and deploying a passive towed sonar array called ITASS which was used to locate and identify Soviet subs. ITASS evolved from the land based system called SOSUS and is now standard equipment on both anti-sub warfare surface ships and on nuc subs. Tom Clancy mentioned it in "Hunt for Red October" which got him into a bit of trouble with the Pentagon. Here's the history of the original DASH gyro-copter and system: http://www.gyrodynehelicopters.com/dash_history.htm |
Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
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Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 14:10:48 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 12/25/2014 12:24 PM, Wayne.B wrote: http://www.livescience.com/49259-navy-helicopter-drone-tests.html This is not the first attempt at flying drones from a Navy vessel. The first ship I was assigned to in 1969 had the DASH system installed, including the required flight deck and hanger. DASH wasn't all that successful primarily due to the primitive control and communication electronics available at the time. The DASH equipment was removed and the hanger was converted into additional sleeping quarters for members of a (then classified) special projects group of which I was a member. We were tasked with testing and deploying a passive towed sonar array called ITASS which was used to locate and identify Soviet subs. ITASS evolved from the land based system called SOSUS and is now standard equipment on both anti-sub warfare surface ships and on nuc subs. Tom Clancy mentioned it in "Hunt for Red October" which got him into a bit of trouble with the Pentagon. Here's the history of the original DASH gyro-copter and system: http://www.gyrodynehelicopters.com/dash_history.htm === Interesting. Sometime around 1972 I was an imposter on the "To Tell the Truth" TV program for a fellow name Ken Brock. Ken's claim to fame was that he had flown a gyrocopter 3,400 miles cross country. It was an interesting day in the television studio filming that sequence, meeting the other contestants, and meeting the panelists. |
Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
|
Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
|
Navy Completes Shipboard Testing of Full Sized Drone Helicopter
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 22:49:25 -0500, wrote:
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 21:01:01 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 20:54:11 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 20:21:51 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 25 Dec 2014 14:10:48 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 12/25/2014 12:24 PM, Wayne.B wrote: http://www.livescience.com/49259-navy-helicopter-drone-tests.html This is not the first attempt at flying drones from a Navy vessel. The first ship I was assigned to in 1969 had the DASH system installed, including the required flight deck and hanger. DASH wasn't all that successful primarily due to the primitive control and communication electronics available at the time. The DASH equipment was removed and the hanger was converted into additional sleeping quarters for members of a (then classified) special projects group of which I was a member. We were tasked with testing and deploying a passive towed sonar array called ITASS which was used to locate and identify Soviet subs. ITASS evolved from the land based system called SOSUS and is now standard equipment on both anti-sub warfare surface ships and on nuc subs. Tom Clancy mentioned it in "Hunt for Red October" which got him into a bit of trouble with the Pentagon. Here's the history of the original DASH gyro-copter and system: http://www.gyrodynehelicopters.com/dash_history.htm === Interesting. Sometime around 1972 I was an imposter on the "To Tell the Truth" TV program for a fellow name Ken Brock. Ken's claim to fame was that he had flown a gyrocopter 3,400 miles cross country. It was an interesting day in the television studio filming that sequence, meeting the other contestants, and meeting the panelists. Gyrocopters are pretty scary. I knew an old IBM guy who loved them but he will always have a limp from a crash on the garden state parkway (a leg and hip full of pins, screws and other man made parts) and he had a bunch he walked away from. He said they were the motor cycles of the sky. I suppose that was viable when IBM had good insurance ;-) === I think all of the ultra light flying machines are death traps of sorts. We had a neighbor down the street from us who put himself in the hospital for some major repairs after crashing his ultra light in the boondocks out past Lehigh Acres. He was hanging upside down in a tree and would have died there except that he was able to reach his cell phone and they triangulated his position. I remember that. === It made the national news at the time. We heard about it while we were out cruising the Carib. He's made a surprisingly decent recovery considering how many serious fractures he had. |
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