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Published: 2018-06-15 00:00:19 +0000 UTC; Views: 1568; Favourites: 21; Downloads: 7
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Description
The U.S. Air Force Ryan AQM-34L Firebee drone "Tom Cat" of the 556th Reconnaissance Squadron flew 68 missions over North Vietnam before being shot down by anti-aircraft fire over Hanoi. Photographer Unknown.
The Ryan Model 147 Lightning Bug is a jet -powered drone, or unmanned aerial vehicle , produced and developed by Ryan Aeronautical from the earlier Ryan Firebee target drone series.
Beginning in 1962, the Model 147 was introduced as a reconnaissance RPV (Remotely Piloted Vehicle, nomenclature of that era) for a United States Air Force project named Fire Fly. Over the next decade — assisted with secret funding from the recently formed National Reconnaissance Office along with support of the Strategic Air Command and Ryan Aeronautical's own resources — the basic Model 147 design would be developed into a diverse series of variants configured for a wide array of mission-specific roles, with multiple new systems, sensors and payloads used, modified and improved upon during the operational deployment of these drones in Southeast Asia. Missions performed by the Model 147 series RPVs included high- and low-altitude photographic and electronic aerial reconnaissance , surveillance , decoy , electronic warfare , signals intelligence , and psychological warfare .
The Ryan drones were designed without landing gear for simplicity and to save weight. Like its Firebee predecessor, the Model 147 could either be air-launched from a larger carrier aircraft or launched from the ground using a solid rocket booster; at completion of its mission the drone deployed its own recovery parachute which could be snatched in mid-air by a recovery helicopter (in a combat environment it was naturally not desired to recover the drone on, from or near enemy territory and ground or water impact could also cause damage to or loss of the drone or its payload).
At the end of the Vietnam War in 1975 the U.S. military 's available funding and need for combat drones severely declined, even as Teledyne Ryan introduced further advanced developments of the Model 147 series such as the BGM-34 strike and defense suppression RPVs. Costs of maintaining the Lightning Bugs at full readiness could no longer be justified. Only by the 1990s did substantial interest, organization and funding again emerge from the U.S. Air Force and intelligence agencies to develop, acquire and widely deploy combat UAVs .
Manufacturer: Ryan Aeronautical
First flight: 1962
Primary users: United States Air Force , United States Navy
Unit cost: $215,000 (AQM-34L)
Variants: Ryan Firebee
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Comments: 4
BlueEyedBrigadier [2019-02-06 15:44:39 +0000 UTC]
Wow...I never realized that UAVs and UCAVs have been around since the Vietnam War! Makes one wonder about just how much more advanced modern models like the Reaper and Predator would be if funding, research, and development had kept up between the late 70s and the 1990s....
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GeneralTate In reply to BlueEyedBrigadier [2019-02-06 20:36:50 +0000 UTC]
Well consider this, given the size of black budgets, imagine what did continue to develop without public knowledge. The Predator UAV system is an older system, imagine what we have that is 30 years or more in advance of today and flies out of facilities like Area 51.
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BlueEyedBrigadier In reply to GeneralTate [2019-02-06 22:35:58 +0000 UTC]
*puts on tinfoil hat* I do
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