As it unveiled a new modular drone concept design last month, General Atomics also hinted at a new propulsion technology concept that a pair of top company executives believe has 'game changing' potential. The company's featured product at the Air and Space Forces Association conference was its Gambit drone design, which features a common base from which four different designs can be produced. The base makes up around 70 percent of the aircraft designs, according to Dave Alexander, GA's president of aeronautical systems and Mike Atwood, the firm's senior director of advanced programmes. But on the wall of the company's booth, concept art showed off a flying-wing shape associated most commonly with the B-2 or B-21 stealth bombers. Rather than part of Gambit, this design is part of what the company calls MQ-Next, which may end up incorporating a new propulsion effort for GA that Atwood hyped as a "completely disruptive technology."
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2022-Ausgabe von Future Flight.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2022-Ausgabe von Future Flight.
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