Tigershark unmanned aircraft tested at U.S. Army’s premier test center

The latest edition of the Outpost newspaper has announced that Tigershark unmanned aircraft tested at Yuma Proving Ground, the U.S. Army’s premier test center.

The TigerShark from Navmar Applied Sciences Corporation (NASC) is a proven fixed-wing, unmanned aerial vehicle that has performed without fail through thousands of sorties. Its rugged design and low cost make it ideal for applications from UAV flight training to complex payload integration for operational uses as well as scientific research.

“The autopilot in this airframe is amazing,” said Troy Rodriguez, YPG test coordinator. “It is a reliable workhorse that is very accurate when it comes to the flight profile that is programmed into it.

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Today’s Tigershark flies many miles away from its ground controller and provides high-quality video for upwards of eight hours, both day and night, as it loiters quietly high overhead. It boasts laser radar that can see through obstructions like foliage and camouflage to produce three-dimensional images of an object. All of these capabilities were integrated into the platform over the past 15 years, and the vast majority of testing for each subsequent improvement occurred at YPG.

“The Tigershark of today is nothing like when we started,” said David Reed, Navair electronics engineer. “When we started, it was basically a big radio-controlled toy. Now, it is a mature UAV system.

”The Tigershark was a workhorse of surveillance and reconnaissance operations in Iraq and Afghanistan between 2006 and 2014, and continues to undergo testing at YPG today.

Photo courtesy of The Outpost – U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground

“We’ve done over 10,000 combat missions and 75,000 flight hours in theater,” said Reed. “We’re not currently deployed in theater, but we are testing new developmental payloads for other programs of record.

”YPG’s clear, stable air and extremely dry climate along with vast institutional UAS testing knowledge makes it an attractive location to host this kind of work. Also important to the mission is the proving ground’s robust sensor-testing workload and ability to control a large swath of the radio frequency (RF) spectrum. YPG has more than 500 permanent radio frequencies, and several thousand temporary ones in a given month.“The weather is phenomenal, and YPG has a tremendous amount of restricted airspace,” said Reed. “We have at least 330 days of good flying weather every year.”

The vast range and air space here means the testers can easily evaluate things like fuel consumption and the ability to smoothly hand-off control of the craft between controllers located in multiple ground control stations.

“We were ableThe Tigershark was renowned for its reliability in Southwest Asia, which testers attribute to the extensive evaluations that occurred at YPG.

“We were able to test in a similar dry, very hot desert environment,” said Reed. “Our electrical and engine systems were really up to par because of the testing we did here.”

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