Northrop Grumman,
in cooperation with Saab Aerosystems, has provided the attitude and
heading reference system (AHRS) for the nEUROn Unmanned Combat Aerial
Vehicle (UCAV) demonstrator, which recently completed a successful first
flight.
Northrop Grumman’s German navigation systems subsidiary,
Northrop Grumman LITEF, supplied the fibre-optic, gyrocompassing LCR-100
AHRS for the European UCAV demonstrator.
The LCR-100 AHRS
provides navigation information relating to the aircraft’s position,
heading and attitude. The north-finding gyrocompass feature eliminates
the need for a magnetic sensing unit, similar to an inertial reference
system.
Additionally, the system’s precise inertial measurement
unit enables extended coasting performance for the aircraft to continue
providing accurate navigation information in the event of GPS signal loss. The LCR-100 is certified to civil standards for commercial off-the-shelf equipment in military platforms.
“The LCR-100 has proven that it is an efficient, cost-effective solution for unmanned aerial vehicles, particularly because of its small size and light weight,” said Eckehardt Keip, managing director for Northrop Grumman LITEF.
“The system performed to our high standards and played a critical role in the nEUROn’s major milestone achievement.”
The
nEUROn is an experimental UCAV being developed with international
cooperation, led by France, and includes government and industry
partners from Greece, Italy, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.
It is
the first large stealth platform to be designed in Europe. The programme
aims to develop, test and sustain key technologies for use by European
manufacturers in the next generation of unmanned aerial vehicles and combat aircraft.
The
demonstrator will not enter serial production. However, additional
flight testing, including a flight in Sweden during 2014, is expected.
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