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Written by and republished with permission by AVweb
Tuesday, 15 September 2009
As if to
prove that technology tends to come full circle, the Air Force is now using
piloted aircraft as simulators to train pilots of UAVs. "We're using a
manned aircraft to simulate an unmanned aircraft," said CAP-U.S. Air Force
Commander Col. Bill Ward. The Air Force has installed a "Predator
Ball" under the wing of a CAP Cessna 182, giving the four-place single the
ability to pretend it's a Predator or Reaper UAV ready to mix it up with
insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan. All the actual UAVs are busy doing that and
that's left a "critical training gap" for Army and Marine personnel
learning how to use the drones. "The Surrogate Predator (as the CAP 182 is
known) is the solution," said Maj. Matt Martin, chief of the
Predator/Reaper Ops Branch of Air Combat Command at Langley Air Force Base, Va.
With the pod in place, the 182 has
the "capability of locking onto a target and tracking it" a CAP news
release says. But since the Cessna lacks any other refinements, it's role is
that of camera platform, using the pod to stream live video to the trainees as
they sort out their battlefield priorities. There will, of course, be extra
training required to teach CAP pilots how to make their aircraft behave
appropriately."Basically, we will imitate being a Predator," said CAP
Capt. David Lewis, one of six pilots initially selected for training. Assuming
it all goes well, Lewis says mimicking UAVs will be "the next big thing
for CAP in homeland security and the defense of our country.
AVweb is the World's Premier Independent Aviation News Resource
Go to: http://www.capvolunteernow.com/ to read an article by Civil Air Patrol, National Headquarters for further details.