"The Air Force is asking for $3.2 million to purchase 11 WASP micro air vehicles – those wicked little Aeorvironment throwable drones that peek over the next ridge. The Air Force says the drones will allow:
Battlefield Airmen to rapidly adapt to the dynamic war fighting environment of the Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO). The system provides increased situational awareness in a combat environment, enables ground-based Battlefield Airmen to find and track time-critical targets, and provide bomb damage assessment and force protection for forward-deployed troops."
That's $291,000 each. Can this possibly be right?
Comments
The planes are around .40 size gas, nothing special there, just a stable airframe for endurance rather than speed with removable wings for transport. Ground station is a few cases of gear including laptops, controls, spare parts, and in some cases a portable satcom link to relay video outside the operating area of the UAV back to a larger base or even back to a base in the US. To give you an idea how neat it is, I can go get on the Army secure net in North Carolina, pull up a list of live feeds being sent in from all over the world, and when I click on one I get a live stream of what that UAV is sending back if it's out in a training area 10 miles away or 6000 miles away in Iraq tracking insurgents. That mostly goes for Predators as they are ALWAYS out lurking around, but if any of the smaller UAV's are broadcasting on a satcom link I can watch those as well.
Those UAV's are like any other military contract. Typically there is a request for an item such as a new UAV design, a program manager is formed, big military contracting companies bid on the project, someone wins the bid, from there an entire program is formed and delivered. This includes everything from R&D, production runs, testing/improvements, spare parts, training, support, etc.
So with all that being said...the price tag isn't that hard to believe. There's a lot of smart people and some high end technology most people don't even know existed to make all this work. Needless to say some of it is still overpriced, but that's how it goes. End result to all this is the US military has so many cool toys that if a "real" war broke out tomorrow there's too much of it to take it all with us. Give it 5-10 years and UAV's will rule the battlefield, it's impressive and scary at the same time.
It does add up fast.
And nobody's gonna let them sell the gear they paid for to be developed to the public (a.k.a. the enemy).
True, the miltary/govt often issue very specific requirements, but the potential for additional sales beyond the
original tender should allow lower unit costing.
Paul
I'm not necessarily trying to justify the $3.2MM figure, but I am trying to put the issue in perspective.
Paul
Earl