Lockheed Martin Building Drone Capable Of Transporting Cars

Lockheed Martin Building Drone Capable Of Transporting Cars

Military drones may soon be able to do more than just carry weapons or aid spying missions. Last week at the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International trade show, Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works division showed off design renderings of the Transformer TX drone. Said to cost nearly $20.3 million, the Transformer TX drone will be capable of transporting cars and large storage containers. Eventually, it may even be able to transport pods full of soldiers.

It is said that the Transformer TX is currently in “Phase 3,” of the development process. This means that Lockheed Martin is now finalizing the design before manufacturing a working prototype. DARPA will then evaluate the prototype to see if it meets requirements, if it does, Lockheed Martin may receive a contract to produce Transformer TX drones for flight in 2015. Lockheed will start testing a one-third sized model in wind tunnels soon. According to the manufacturer, the drone will be able to travel 250 miles on a full tank of gas. DARPA was actually looking for a military ready flying car in the beginning, but Lockheed found that using unmanned drones to transport cars, soldiers or supplies made more sense than making a flying car which would require a pilot.

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  • Lockheed Martin Building Drone Capable Of Transporting Cars original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    The Russian Night Hunter Is The Flying Tank of Your Nightmares

    The Russian Night Hunter Is The Flying Tank of Your Nightmares

    Russia has been working tirelessly to modernize its military might and has already revealed some seriously intimidating firepower over the past few years. Now they’re working to replace the devastating Mi-24 HIND with something even more terrifying armament—Russia’s version of the AH-64 Apache, the Mi-28 Night Hunter.

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    You’ll Wanna Be This Soldier Dangling From a Roper Ladder Over Sharks

    You'll Wanna Be This Soldier Dangling From a Roper Ladder Over Sharks

    Some images need little in the way of introduction. This one shows a soldier climbing a rope ladder attached to a helicopter above infested waters. Soldier. Rope ladder. Helicopter. Sharks. Wow.

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    There’s a Soldier-Dangling-Above-a-Shark Photo That’s Actually Real

    There's a Soldier-Dangling-Above-a-Shark Photo That's Actually Real

    Some images need little in the way of introduction. This one shows a soldier climbing a rope ladder attached to a helicopter above infested waters. Soldier. Rope ladder. Helicopter. Sharks. Wow.

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    Visualized: F-35B fighter’s vertical landing, in the dark (video)

    Visualized F35B fighter's vertical landing, in the dark video

    The jury’s still out on Lockheed Martin’s F-35B fighter. The aircraft is expected to cost the US more than $1.5 trillion over its lifetime, and it’s been described as being too heavy and too sluggish — one critic has gone so far as to call the jet a “dog.” One thing’s for sure, though: the F-35 looks mighty impressive, especially when it’s landing vertically on an aircraft carrier. In the dark. Click past the break for a look at Lockheed’s trillion-dollar light show, courtesy of Uncle Sam.

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    Source: Lockheed Martin (YouTube)

    Canada Tests Stealth Snowmobile

    Canada Tests Stealth SnowmobileWe have seen stealth fighter jets and stealth bombers in the past, but here we are with word that Canada’s military has started to test their $620,000 stealth snowmobile which relies on electric motors to sneak up on enemies. The new machines must be tested in a way against current machines for noise, speed, endurance, and being able make the switch to stealth ‘silent mode’ in a jiffy. Apart from that, since this is meant to be a stealth snowmobile, its full capabilities of the Arctic warfare capabilities remain under wraps as a secret .

    The whole idea behind this stealth snowmobile is to enable troops to covertly operate in Arctic conditions, and each of these machines would cost a whopping $620,000, being one of the first few silent hybrid-electric versions of a snowmobile. So far, initial tests were carried out across different snow conditions at Canadian Forces Base Petawawa, and according to the defence report’s requirements, “the prototype must be at least nearly as capable and reliable as a standard internal combustion snowmobile, while providing a significant noise reduction.” Solid Snake could have made good use of one of these puppies back in his first Metal Gear Solid outing on the Sony PlayStation, don’t you think so?

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  • Canada Tests Stealth Snowmobile original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    US Government Finally Admits: Yes, Area 51 Exists

    US Government Finally Admits: Yes, Area 51 Exists

    It’s a good day to be a conspiracy theorist. Ending a decades-long game of leak after leak without any official word, the US government has finally admitted the existence of Area 51 in a recently declassified CIA report detailing the history of the U-2.

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    These Abandoned Tanks Are Rusting Mementoes of the Wars of the Past

    These Abandoned Tanks Are Rusting Mementoes of the Wars of the PastSwords may be driven into ploughshares when they’ve finished their fighting, but tanks are often left to rust, in graveyards of military vehicles or on the battlefields where they fell.

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    Defense Mobile to offer Sprint-based cellular service to soldiers and veterans

    Defense Mobile to offer Sprintbased cellular service to soldiers and veterans

    While the US military can devote many resources to putting smartphones on the battlefield, it can’t do the same for soldiers’ private lives. A new carrier, Defense Mobile, wants to fill that void: it just announced a deal to use Sprint’s CDMA and LTE networks for cellular service devoted to active-duty forces, reserves and veterans. The provider will offer plans at enlisted rank budgets, ranging from $20 for the basics to $60 for a family plan. It won’t skimp on the handset selection, though — the company already promises the Galaxy S 4, HTC One and iPhone 5. Defense Mobile hopes to go live in 2014, and it should arrive with both apps and branding tailored to each military branch.

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    Via: GigaOM

    Source: Defense Mobile

    Air Force might shutter satellite- and space junk-tracking Space Fence soon

    DNP RIP Space fence

    We imagine the Air Force is none too pleased that Space Fence might shutter as soon as September 1st due to budget constraints, according to leaked memos obtained by Space News. Space Fence, a powerful system of radars that track satellites and space junk orbiting the Earth, performs 40 percent of the Air Force Space Surveillance Network’s observations. It can detect objects as small as a basketball up to 24,000 kilometers away and can constantly beam info back to the planet with no human input. It’s no surprise then that the airmen called it a “critical defense system” when they tried to save the project in July — an endeavor they failed if this info turns out to be true. Before anyone worries about unmonitored celestial debris hurtling toward Earth, know that a plan to build a more advanced Space Fence replacement exists. The only reason why it’s not in the works is because it has yet to secure funding, leading this editor to think that someone really needs to get started engineering a money tree.

    [Image credit: NASA]

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    Source: SpaceNews