Procurement: Shadows For Sweden

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May 27, 2010: Sweden is buying two American RQ-7B Shadow 200 UAV units (each containing four UAVs and ground control and support gear), for $31.4 million. Shadow 200 is most widely used by the U.S. Army, where each Shadow 200 UAV platoon has 22 troops and operates four UAVs, plus the ground control equipment. Typically, each combat brigade has one Shadow UAV platoon. Sweden will not assign Shadow systems to brigades, but more likely to peacekeeping operations.

Each 159 kg (350 pound) Shadow 200 UAV costs $500,000, and can stay in the air 5.5 hours per sortie. A day camera and night vision camera is carried on each aircraft. Able to fly as high as 4,900 meters (15,000 feet), the Shadow can thus go into hostile territory and stay high enough (over 3,200 meters/10,000 feet) to be safe from hostile rifle and machine-gun fire. The Shadow UAVs can carry 25.5 kg (56 pounds) of equipment, and is 3.5 meters/11 feet long and has a wingspan of 4.1 meters/12.75 feet. The Shadow has a range of about 50 kilometers. The U.S. Army has had great success with the Shadow 200, which is what caught the attention of the Swedes.

The army has successfully tested a lightweight laser designator for the Shadow 200.   This enables the UAV to carry and fire a Hellfire missile, which it has done in tests. Technically, the Shadow should not be able to carry a Hellfire, as the UAV weighs 84.5 kg/186 pounds empty (no fuel or sensors), and nearly 159 kg/350 pounds when taking off with 36.4 kg/80 pounds of fuel and up to a 45.5 kg/100 pounds of sensors. By carrying less fuel (and staying in the air for about three hours, instead of six), the Shadow can carry a vidcam, laser designator and one Hellfire. Since the Shadow has to operate within 50 kilometers of its base station, and has a cruise speed of 148 kilometers an hour, you can have one standing by, loaded with a Hellfire, if some other UAV spots a target in need of prompt attention

While the RQ-7 is going to be replaced by the RQ-1C, in American service, over the next few years, there is still an enormous demand for UAVs just now. So the 116 RQ-7s already delivered are being worked hard (they have already flown over 500,000 hours), and will probably be heavily used until worn out or lost in action. But foreign demand for Shadow 200 is also keeping the aircraft in production. This year, the army will begin receiving a Predator class replacement for the Shadow 200, the 1.4 ton MQ-1C Sky Warrior.

 

 

 

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