Thales Watchkeeper WK450

Last updated

Watchkeeper WK450
British Army Watchkeeper UAV at RAF Akrotiri.jpg
A Watchkeeper based at RAF Akrotiri
General information
Type Unmanned surveillance and reconnaissance aerial vehicle
National originUnited Kingdom
Israel
Manufacturer Thales Group & Elbit Systems
StatusIn service [1]
Primary user British Army
History
Introduction date30 November 2018 (full operational capability)
First flight14 April 2010
Developed from Elbit Hermes 450
Variants Watchkeeper X

The Thales Watchkeeper WK450 is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) for intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition, and reconnaissance (ISTAR) used by the British Army. It was developed by UAV Tactical Systems (U-TacS), a joint venture of Elbit Systems UK and Thales UK, and is based on Elbit's Hermes 450. [2]

Contents

The Watchkeeper will be retired by March 2025.

Overview

The Watchkeeper WK450 is based on the Elbit Hermes 450 UAV and is built in the UK by a joint venture company, UAV Tactical Systems (U-TacS), set up by the Israeli company Elbit Systems (51% ownership) and the Thales group. The Watchkeeper is 6.5m long, with a 10.9m wingspan. Its cruising speed is 77 knots (143 km/h), and it can operate at an altitude of 16,000 feet (4,900 m). It has a takeoff weight of 485 kg, a typical endurance of 14 hours, [3] a payload capacity of 150 kg and uses a rotary Wankel engine provided by UAV Engines Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Elbit Systems, [4] and target acquisition camera by another subsidiary, Instro. [5] It can operate up to 150 km from the Ground Control Station; multiple stations can be linked to extend the range. [6] It was originally intended to enter service in June 2010, [7] but years of delays, technical issues, hardware modifications, difficulties in training sufficient pilots and incidents means that it was not expected to be fully operational until late 2018.

First flight on 14 April 2010 First UK flight of Watchkeeper UAV MOD 45151422.jpg
First flight on 14 April 2010

A prime difference between the Hermes 450 operated by the British Army and Watchkeeper was that the H450 was fitted only with an electro-optical/infrared sensor, while the WK450 has in addition a dual-mode synthetic aperture radar and ground moving target indication system that allows it to see through all weather conditions. [8] The British Army was to receive 30 Watchkeepers and a further 24 due to go into store to be deployed as needed. [9]

As of March 2018 the 47th Regiment Royal Artillery was the only unit operating the Watchkeeper. [10] By August 2020, Watchkeeper had accumulated over 3,000 flying hours since the first flight in 2010. [3]

In July 2022, Watchkeeper's out-of-service date was programmed to be 2042. [11]

However, in November 2024 it was announced that entire Watchkeeper fleet would be retired by March 2025. [12] [13]

History

The program started originally in June 2000, when Racal Defence Electronics won a Ministry of Defence tender to conduct the 12 month assessment phase of the SENDER Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle program. SENDER was defined as a Tactical UAV System, which will provide real-time battlefield intelligence to the British Army, to meet unit level Intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition, and reconnaissance requirements. [14]

The next phase of the program was initiated to support an operational need, which was identified at the start of the War in Afghanistan, to provide the UK Armed Forces with all-weather day and night surveillance capability. In February 2003, the Ministry of Defence announced that two contenders reached the final stage of the tender, a group that includes Thales (at the time still operating under the name Racal Electronics) and Elbit Systems, [15] and a second contender Northrop Grumman, after BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin were deselected (BAE subsequently entered negotiations to join forces with Northrop for the bid). [16]

Thales and Elbit won the tender in July 2004, and proposed to build UAVs based on Elbit Systems' Hermes 180 and Hermes 450, which will be delivered to the British Army between 2006 and 2009. [17] In August 2005 the program agreement was signed, at a cost of £700 million. [18] The tender condition included a requirement to set up a local manufacturing facility for the program, [15] therefore, at the end of 2005 a joint venture company was established, named "UAV Tactical Systems Ltd (U-TacS)", based in Leicester to manufacture the Watchkeeper. [19] Additionally, in October 2005, a flight testing facility was inaugurated at ParcAberporth in West Wales, with a test flight of an Hermes 450. [20]

In June 2007, the joint venture company UAV Tactical Systems, was awarded a $110 million contract to provide an urgent intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance support capability for the British Army, in Iraq and Afghanistan, using Hermes 450 UAVs leased from Elbit systems (and not using any Watchkeeper WK450, that was still in development). [21] [22]

On 15 July 2007, the UK MoD revealed that 54 Watchkeepers would be delivered to the British Army at a cost of £800m. [23] This figure includes construction of new basing facilities at Boscombe Down airfield, ground training facilities and simulators at the School of Artillery, ground control stations, development and testing of extensive aircraft modifications including automatic take-off and landing and the integration and provision of new sensors including radars.[ citation needed ]

In October 2008, Rosh Pina Airport in Israel was used for flight trials of the Watchkeeper, after Britain had objected to the trials being conducted at Fik Airfield, Elbit's test site, which is in the Golan Heights. [24]

Watchkeeper's first UK flight took place on Wednesday 14 April 2010 from ParcAberporth in Wales, [25] but due to numerous delays the delivery date slipped. [26] [27] By 2014 Watchkeeper had gained certification from the Military Aviation Authority, had its Release to Service granted was cleared for military flight training with the Royal Artillery, operating out of Boscombe Down in Wiltshire. [28] In February 2014 the French Ministry of Defence indicated that the French Army might purchase the Watchkeeper WK450, [29] but they instead selected the Sagem Patroller for the tactical unmanned air vehicle requirement. [30]

By December 2015 delivery to the British Army was progressing well, but there were difficulties in training sufficient pilots. As poor weather in Britain was limiting the time available to conduct flying training the decision was made to conduct future training on the tropical Ascension Island located in the Atlantic Ocean. Although there is hope that future modifications to the aircraft will enable it to fly in poor weather, the training on Ascension Island is set to continue for the foreseeable future. Enough pilots and ground crew are expected to be trained for full operational capability to be reached by early 2018. [31] [32]

Costs of the programme to March 2018 were £1.08 billion, more than £200 million above the original budget. The original order was for 54 Watchkeepers, though it has not been confirmed that more than 45 had been delivered at that date. [2] A report by the Major Projects Authority, published in June 2015, revealed that the estimated cost of achieving full operational capability of the program is £1.2bn. [33]

Watchkeeper achieved the Army's full operational capability 2 (FOC 2) milestone on 30 November 2018, though without formal release to service (RTS) certification, which would allow the trials facility to move from West Wales Airport, which has a nearby oversea trials area, to Boscombe Down. [1]

In June 2023, Defence minister James Cartlidge stated that the Watchkeeper program had cost £1.35 billion to date, including necessary airfield upgrades at Aberporth and Boscombe Down. By 2023, one in seven Watchkeepers had been lost, giving concerns about the cost-effectiveness of the Watchkeeper compared to smaller more modern UAVs. [34]

In November 2024, Defence Secretary John Healey announced to the UK House of Commons that some military equipment, including the entire fleet of Watchkeeper WK450 Mk1 drones, would be retired earlier than planned to cut costs. [12] At the time of the announcement only 11 of the 54 acquired were in military use, with the remainder in storage or used in tests; seven had been lost in accidents. [35]

Incidents

During the development of Watchkeeper, some units crashed in the UK, and inquiries were held.

Two Watchkeepers crashed on flight trials over Cardigan Bay in February and March 2017, resulting in the grounding of all Watchkeepers for four months. [36] [37] In June 2018 a Watchkeeper crashed on land near the trials base at West Wales Airport, increasing the number of Watchkeepers lost in crashes to five. [38] [39]

As of December 2020 units that had crashed in the UK were WK031 - 16 October 2014, WK006 - 2 November 2015, WK042 - 3 February 2017, WK043 - 24 March 2017, and WK050 - 13 June 2018. Links to the enquiries are available at the Army Watchkeeper Web page. [3]

A Watchkeeper crashed in Cyprus in October 2020 during training. This was due to an avionics power failure and the air vehicle being unable to regain communication with the ground control system. Following the incident, WK044 operated as planned following the 'lost link procedure' to regain ground communication. This was unsuccessful, so the air vehicle attempted to land. Upon an attempted landing, a nose gear steering failure caused the air vehicle to steer off the runway. The incident resulted in the loss of WK044. [40]

A Watchkeeper crashed near Cyprus in May 2022 during training. Its wreckage was recovered from the sea to begin investigation into the cause of the incident.

On 10 November 2022, a Watchkeeper WK036 crashed on an exercise in New Mexico, the eighth loss since 2014. [34]

Deployment

On 29 September 2014, the MoD revealed that an undisclosed number of Watchkeepers had become fully operational and sent to Afghanistan. The aircraft were stationed at Camp Bastion to provide force protection for British troops and worked alongside Hermes 450s that it is derived from. [41] Watchkeeper proved its use by successfully supporting a detachment of U.S. Marines using its Thales I-Master radar. It cued a Hermes 450 onto a target for continued tracking, which then passed the information on to a Royal Air Force MQ-9 Reaper to conduct an airstrike. Some 140 flights were conducted for 8 hours a day until operations ceased in mid-October 2014.

Border patrol

In September 2020 under Operation Devran the UK Border Force started using Watchkeeper to patrol the English Channel for potential illegal entrants into the UK. The operation was criticised as being of little practical value. Just 15 sorties, totalling 43 hours and 52 minutes, were flown in September 2020, and six sorties for 23 hours and 54 minutes were flown the following month. Chris Cole, director of Drone Wars UK, said "the use of military-grade drones at borders is the beginning of the use of drones that blur the boundaries between military and domestic policing". [40]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AAI RQ-7 Shadow</span> American unmanned aerial vehicle

The AAI RQ-7 Shadow is an American unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) used by the United States Army, Australian Army, Swedish Army, Turkish Air Force and Italian Army for reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition and battle damage assessment. Launched from a trailer-mounted pneumatic catapult, it is recovered with the aid of arresting gear similar to jets on an aircraft carrier. Its gimbal-mounted, digitally stabilized, liquid nitrogen-cooled electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) camera relays video in real time via a C-band line-of-sight data link to the ground control station (GCS).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elbit Systems</span> Israeli military technology company

Elbit Systems Ltd. is an Israel-based international military technology company and defense contractor. Founded in 1966 by Elron, Elbit Systems is the primary provider of the Israeli military's land-based equipment and unmanned aerial vehicles. It is an important company within the defense industry of Israel.

Aberporth Airport is situated southwest of Aberporth, Ceredigion, Wales. The airport is being developed as West Wales Airport for domestic flights. It is also developing as a centre for the deployment of civil and military unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), known as 'drones'. The airport underwent major improvements in 2008 which extended the length of the runway from 945 to 1,257 m.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elbit Hermes 450</span> Israeli military drone, 1998

The Hermes 450 is a medium-sized multi-payload unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) designed by Israeli defence company Elbit for tactical long endurance missions. It has an endurance of over 20 hours, with a primary mission of reconnaissance, surveillance and communications relay. Payload options include electro-optical/infrared sensors, communications and electronic intelligence, synthetic-aperture radar/ground-moving target indication, electronic warfare, and hyperspectral sensors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">BAE Systems Phoenix</span>

The BAE Systems Phoenix was an all-weather, day or night, real-time surveillance Unmanned Air Vehicle. It had a twin-boom UAV with a surveillance pod, from which the imagery was data linked to a ground control station (GCS) that also controlled the aircraft in flight. It was the third generation of UAV in British Army service with the Royal Artillery after SD/1 and Canadair Midge.

47 Regiment Royal Artillery is a regiment of the Royal Artillery in the British Army. It is equipped with the Thales Watchkeeper WK450. It is located at Horne Barracks, Larkhill in Wiltshire. It falls under command of Joint Aviation Command.

ParcAberporth is a technology park created on what was Royal Air Force (RAF) station Aberporth, near the village of that name in the county of Ceredigion, Wales, which is now Aberporth Airport. The station was one of two local sites that had been used as a site for a missile range that stretched out for some miles into the nearby Cardigan Bay. This Danger Area still exists and is known as Danger Area D201. Parc Aberporth is the UK's purpose-built testing site for unmanned aircraft. The Parc Aberporth centre was specially developed to test and trial unmanned aircraft, for both military and civilian use.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elbit Skylark</span> Type of aircraft

The Elbit Systems Skylark I and Skylark II are miniature UAVs developed by Elbit Systems. Initial models of the Skylark entered service in 2008.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">IAI Searcher</span> Type of aircraft

The IAI Searcher is a reconnaissance UAV developed in Israel in the 1980s. In the following decade, it replaced the IMI Mastiff and IAI Scout UAVs then in service with the Israeli Army.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Selex ES Falco</span> Type of aircraft

The Falco is a tactical unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) designed and produced by Selex ES. The UAV is designed to be a medium-altitude, medium-endurance surveillance platform capable of carrying a range of payloads, including several types of high-resolution sensors. A larger variant, the Falco EVO, is capable of carrying larger payloads is also available. Neither system is designed to carry weapons, The launch customer, Pakistan, reportedly wanted the Falco armed, a request that Italy rejected.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">IAI Bird-Eye</span> Type of aircraft

IAI Bird-Eye is a family of mini-UAVs developed by Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) Malat division. Designed for military and paramilitary intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elbit Hermes 900</span> Israeli military drone, 2009

The Elbit Systems Hermes 900 Kochav ("Star") is an Israeli medium-size, multi-payload, medium-altitude long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) designed for tactical missions. It is a successor to the Hermes 450 series of drones, one of the most widely used military drones in the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Safran Patroller</span> Unmanned air vehicle

The Patroller is a French medium-altitude long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicle developed and manufactured by Safran Electronics & Defense. The airframe is based on the Stemme ASP S15 motor glider.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martlet (missile)</span> Laser-guided battlefield missile (ASM, AAM, SAM and SSM)

Martlet or the Lightweight Multirole Missile(LMM) is a lightweight air-to-surface, air-to-air, surface-to-air, and surface-to-surface missile developed by Thales Air Defence for the United Kingdom. It is named after a mythical bird from English heraldry that never roosts, the Martlet.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boeing Insitu RQ-21 Blackjack</span> Unmanned air vehicle by Boeing Insitu

The Boeing Insitu RQ-21 Blackjack, company name Integrator, is an American unmanned air vehicle designed and built by Boeing Insitu to meet a United States Navy requirement for a small tactical unmanned air system (STUAS). It is a twin-boom, single-engine monoplane, designed as a supplement to the Boeing Scan Eagle. The Integrator weighs 61 kg (134 lb) and uses the same launcher and recovery system as the Scan Eagle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shahed 129</span> Iranian unmanned aerial vehicle

The Shahed 129 is an Iranian single-engine medium-altitude long-endurance unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) designed by Shahed Aviation Industries for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). The Shahed 129 is capable of combat and reconnaissance missions and has an endurance of 24 hours; it is similar in size, shape and role to the American MQ-1 Predator and is widely considered as one of the most capable drones in Iranian service.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Unmanned systems of the British Army</span>

Unmanned systems of the British Army is a list of all modern and in service remote and unmanned surveillance, reconnaissance, bomb disposal and combat systems of the British Army, as of May 2023.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1st Aviation Brigade Combat Team (United Kingdom)</span> Military unit

The 1st Aviation Brigade Combat Team is an aviation formation of the British Army. Most of its units are from the Army Air Corps (AAC). It was stood up on 1 April 2020 by combining the Wattisham Flying Station Headquarters, formerly the Attack Helicopter Force (AHF) at Wattisham and the Aviation Reconnaissance Force at the Royal Naval Air Station Yeovilton. It reached initial operating capability on 1 April 2021 and full operating capability on 1 January 2023.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Watchkeeper X</span> Unmanned Aircraft System

The Watchkeeper X is a high-performance, tactical, unmanned aircraft system developed by Thales and Elbit. It is the export variant of the Thales Watchkeeper WK450, derived from the Hermes 450. The drone was first unveiled in 2015 at the DSEI 2015 exhibition in London. Initially, the drone was offered to Poland.

References

  1. 1 2 Ripley, Tim (7 February 2019). "Watchkeeper achieves full operational capability". Jane's Defence Weekly. IHS. Archived from the original on 26 April 2019. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  2. 1 2 Corfield, Gareth (29 November 2017). "Watchkeeper drones cost taxpayers £1bn". The Register. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  3. 1 2 3 "Watchkeeper". army.mod.uk. 28 August 2020.
  4. Major Subsidiaries. Elbit Systems. Retrieved 3 January 2009.
  5. "Elbit Systems U.K. Drone-camera Unit Shut by pro-Palestinian Protest". Haaretz. 19 February 2015.
  6. Army moves Watchkeeper drone training to tropics for winter after flying problems in UK weather - Thebureauinvestigates.com, 11 December 2015
  7. Lewis Page (2 March 2011). "Blighty's expensive Watchkeeper spy-drone in further delays". The Register . Retrieved 5 March 2011.
  8. Stevenson, Beth (17 November 2014). "British Army praises performance of Watchkeeper during debut deployment". FlightGlobal .
  9. Chuter, Andrew (18 June 2014). "UK's Watchkeeper Fleet To Be Completed by End of Year". Defense News . Archived from the original on 18 June 2014.
  10. Ripley, Tim (21 March 2018). "UK Watchkeeper fails to achieve full operating capability milestone". Jane's Information Group. Archived from the original on 3 April 2018. British Army sources said its sole Watchkeeper unit, 47 Regiment Royal Artillery based at Larkhill on Salisbury Plain, "continues to train and carry out exercises with Watchkeeper".
  11. Quin, Jeremy (11 July 2022). "Question for Ministry of Defence (UIN 31030) – Watchkeeper WK450". UK Parliament. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  12. 1 2 Vock, Ido (20 November 2024). "£500m defence cuts as ships, drones and helicopters scrapped". BBC News Online.
  13. Allison, George (20 November 2024). "Britain to retire fleet of Watchkeeper drones". UK Defence Journal . Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  14. "Racal Team Wins Sender UAV Programme Study". Defense-Aerospace.com. 6 June 2000.
  15. 1 2 Alon, Ido (11 February 2003). "Elbit and Thales Enter Final Phase of $1.3 Billion British Tender". Haaretz.
  16. Marom, Dror (16 February 2003). "Competitors join forces against Elbit-Racal bid for UK UAV contract". Globes.
  17. Frisch, Felix (20 July 2004). "Elbit Systems to provide UAVs for UK Watchkeeper program". Globes (newspaper).
  18. "Elbit to receive £300m share of UK Watchkeeper contract". Globes. 4 August 2005.
  19. "Elbit-Thales joint venture U-TacS gets $500m order". Globes. 30 October 2005.
  20. "Elbit Hermes makes first flight of large UAV in UK". Globes. 8 September 2005.
  21. Yoshai, Michal (7 June 2007). "Elbit Systems unit wins British Army contract". Globes.
  22. Barzilai, Amnon (21 February 2007). "British forces in Iraq and Afghanistan may use Elbit UAVs". Globes.
  23. Lewis Page (15 June 2007). "UK MoD reveals Watchkeeper spy-drone numbers". The Register . Retrieved 3 January 2009.
  24. Blumenkrantz, Zohar (16 October 2008). "Rosh Pina Airport Shut for Drone Trials". Haaretz.
  25. WATCHKEEPER makes first UK flight. Thales. Archived from the original on 18 April 2010. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  26. "The UK's Watchkeeper ISTAR UAV" . Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  27. Michael A. Taverna (28 February 2011). "Watchkeeper Gets New Delivery Date". Aviation Week. Retrieved 5 March 2011.
  28. "Newest eye in the sky Watchkeeper cleared to fly" . Retrieved 5 March 2014.
  29. France negotiates acquisition of Watchkeeper drones against purchase of VBCI armoured by UK - Armyrecognition.com, 20 February 2014
  30. DGA defends Patroller buy, discloses Reaper aspirations - Flightglobal.com, 11 February 2016
  31. "Unmanned Air Vehicles".
  32. "Unmanned Air Vehicles".
  33. Alice Ross and Jack Serle (2 October 2015). "UK's £1.2bn bill for drone that's seen 146 hours of active duty". The Guardian .
  34. 1 2 Corfield, Gareth (31 July 2023). "'Seriously concerning': The drone crash that has brought Army technology into question" . The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  35. Jennings, Gareth (21 November 2024). "UK to scrap Watchkeeper as cost-saving measure". Janes. IHS. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
  36. Corfield, Gareth (1 November 2017). "Two drones, two crashes in two months: MoD still won't say why". The Register. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  37. Corfield, Gareth (15 April 2019). "Brit Watchkeeper drone fell in the sea because blocked sensor made algorithms flip out". The Register. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  38. Corfield, Gareth (14 June 2018). "... Aaaand that's a fifth Brit Army Watchkeeper drone to crash in Wales". The Register. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
  39. "MoD drone crashed into tree near Aberporth, report reveals". BBC News. 11 August 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  40. 1 2 Doward, Jamie (26 December 2020). "British military Watchkeeper drone crashes during Cyprus training flight". The Guardian.
  41. Watchkeeper fully operational in Afghanistan, UK reveals - Flightglobal.com, 29 September 2014