Daily News
by Gail Helmer
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New Screens: Forgotten Battles
Ubi Soft has posted 87 new screens (yes, 87) from its upcoming IL-2 Sturmovik sequel, Forgotten Battles. Click here and check them out.
New Screens: LOMAC
We have 16 new screens from Ubi Soft's upcoming jet simulation, Lock On: Modern Air Combat. Click here to check them out.
Combat Mission: Barbarossa To Berlin v1.01
Battlefront.com has just released the 1.01 patch for Combat Mission: Barbarossa to Berlin. Sporting hundreds of enhancements, fan suggestions and over a dozen new vehicle models this v1.01 patch. Check Click here for the complete 1.01 Patch Readme for more details. Make sure you read the Readme before applying the patch. Download
Please note that this patch is for the US version only. For owners of the European version, CDV Software has released a European 1.01 patch, which can be found here.
Hyperlobby v2.10.170
New version of Hyperlobby is out. Click here for more information.
Military News
Second X-45A UCAV Completes First Flight
The second Boeing X-45A Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle technology demonstrator has successfully completed its first flight at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
After taking off last Thursday from the dry lakebed at NASA-Dryden, X-45A vehicle No. 2 flew for approximately 30 minutes and reached an air speed of 195 knots and an altitude of 7,500 feet. This flight comes six months after the first flight of X-45A vehicle No. 1 on May 22.
"We're very excited about the second X-45A demonstration vehicle joining the flight test program," said Darryl Davis, Boeing UCAV program manager. "Operating two aircraft in flight test will validate the test points more rapidly, and demonstrate the robustness of the system we're developing with our Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, and the U.S. Air Force team."
After initial X-45A flight worthiness tests are completed, the maturing test process will eventually involve flying the two UCAV demonstrators in formation, operating with manned aircraft, dropping ordnance, and performing autonomous missions in simulated threat scenarios.
Toward this objective, the UCAV program successfully demonstrated in October a distributed, multi-vehicle control capability for the UCAV Mission Control Segment, or MCS. The demonstration, conducted at the Boeing Simulation Integration Laboratory in Seattle, showed how the MCS software allows a single operator to control more than one air vehicle in support of fixed target strikes and suppression of enemy air defense missions.
The Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle represents a revolutionary new weapon system that can significantly increase the effectiveness and survivability of manned fighter aircraft while lowering the overall cost of combat operations. In addition to the two X-45A UCAV demonstration vehicles, the UCAV program is also designing and building two more operationally representative prototypes that will demonstrate the military utility and operational value of the UCAV system.
[ Send Us News | Archives ]
by Gail Helmer
Monday November 25, 2002
- New Screens: Forgotten Battles
- New Screens: LOMAC
- Combat Mission: Barbarossa To Berlin v1.01
- Hyperlobby v2.10.170
- Second X-45A UCAV Completes First Flight
New Screens: Forgotten Battles
Ubi Soft has posted 87 new screens (yes, 87) from its upcoming IL-2 Sturmovik sequel, Forgotten Battles. Click here and check them out.
New Screens: LOMAC
We have 16 new screens from Ubi Soft's upcoming jet simulation, Lock On: Modern Air Combat. Click here to check them out.
Combat Mission: Barbarossa To Berlin v1.01
Battlefront.com has just released the 1.01 patch for Combat Mission: Barbarossa to Berlin. Sporting hundreds of enhancements, fan suggestions and over a dozen new vehicle models this v1.01 patch. Check Click here for the complete 1.01 Patch Readme for more details. Make sure you read the Readme before applying the patch. Download
Please note that this patch is for the US version only. For owners of the European version, CDV Software has released a European 1.01 patch, which can be found here.
Hyperlobby v2.10.170
New version of Hyperlobby is out. Click here for more information.
Military News
Second X-45A UCAV Completes First Flight
The second Boeing X-45A Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle technology demonstrator has successfully completed its first flight at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
After taking off last Thursday from the dry lakebed at NASA-Dryden, X-45A vehicle No. 2 flew for approximately 30 minutes and reached an air speed of 195 knots and an altitude of 7,500 feet. This flight comes six months after the first flight of X-45A vehicle No. 1 on May 22.
"We're very excited about the second X-45A demonstration vehicle joining the flight test program," said Darryl Davis, Boeing UCAV program manager. "Operating two aircraft in flight test will validate the test points more rapidly, and demonstrate the robustness of the system we're developing with our Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, and the U.S. Air Force team."
After initial X-45A flight worthiness tests are completed, the maturing test process will eventually involve flying the two UCAV demonstrators in formation, operating with manned aircraft, dropping ordnance, and performing autonomous missions in simulated threat scenarios.
Toward this objective, the UCAV program successfully demonstrated in October a distributed, multi-vehicle control capability for the UCAV Mission Control Segment, or MCS. The demonstration, conducted at the Boeing Simulation Integration Laboratory in Seattle, showed how the MCS software allows a single operator to control more than one air vehicle in support of fixed target strikes and suppression of enemy air defense missions.
The Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle represents a revolutionary new weapon system that can significantly increase the effectiveness and survivability of manned fighter aircraft while lowering the overall cost of combat operations. In addition to the two X-45A UCAV demonstration vehicles, the UCAV program is also designing and building two more operationally representative prototypes that will demonstrate the military utility and operational value of the UCAV system.