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		Boeing to base U.S. Air Force prototype on Australian pilotless combat 
		jet
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		 [March 02, 2021]  By 
		Jamie Freed 
 SYDNEY (Reuters) - Boeing Co will use a pilotless, fighter-like jet 
		developed in Australia as the basis for its U.S. Air Force Skyborg 
		prototype, an executive at the plane maker said on Tuesday.
 
 The "Loyal Wingman", the first military aircraft to be designed and 
		manufactured in Australia in more than 50 years, made its first flight 
		on Saturday under the supervision of a Boeing test pilot monitoring it 
		from a ground control station in South Australia.
 
 Boeing's Loyal Wingman is 38 feet long (11.6 metres), has a 2,000 
		nautical mile (3,704 km) range and a nose that can be outfitted with 
		various payloads. The plane can also carry weapons and act as a shield 
		to help protect more expensive manned fighter jets.
 
 The U.S. Air Force in December awarded multi-million dollar contracts to 
		Boeing, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and Kratos Defense and 
		Security Solutions to produce unmanned aerial prototypes that can team 
		with crewed jets.
 
		
		 
		
 "The airpower teaming system is the basis for our Skyborg bid," Boeing 
		airpower teaming programme director Shane Arnott told reporters. 
		"Obviously the U.S. market is a big market. That is a focus for us, 
		achieving some sort of contract or programme of record in the United 
		States."
 
 Defence contractors are investing increasingly in autonomous technology 
		as militaries around the world look for cheaper and safer ways to 
		maximise their resources.
 
 Australia, a staunch U.S. ally, is home to Boeing's largest footprint 
		outside the United States and has vast airspace with relatively low 
		traffic for flight testing.
 
		
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			A model of Boeing's pilotless, fighter-like jet, dubbed ;Loyal 
			Wingman', is displayed in Avalon, Australia February 27, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Jamie Freed/File Photo 
            
			 
The Australian government said on Tuesday it would invest a further A$115 
million ($89 million) to acquire three more Loyal Wingman aircraft for the Royal 
Australian Air Force (RAAF) to develop tactics for using the jets with crewed 
planes, on top of its initial investment of A$40 million.
 "Our aim with Boeing is to understand how we can get these aircraft to team with 
our existing aircraft to be a force multiplier in the future," RAAF Air-Vice 
Marshal and head of air force capability Cath Roberts said.
 
Britain in January signed a GBP 30 million ($42 million) contract with the 
Belfast unit of Spirit AeroSystems for a similar type of pilotless aircraft to 
have a trial flight in the next three years.
 During the test flight in Australia, the Loyal Wingman took off under its own 
power before flying a pre-determined route at different speeds and altitudes to 
verify its functionality and demonstrate the performance of the design.
 
 Arnott said that three Loyal Wingman aircraft would be used for teaming flights 
this year and that the Australian government's order would take the number 
available to six.
 
 Boeing has said up to 16 Loyal Wingman jets could be teamed with a crewed 
aircraft for missions.
 
 ($1 = 1.2900 Australian dollars)
 
 ($1 = 0.7200 pounds)
 
 (Reporting by Jamie Freed; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Gerry Doyle)
 
				 
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