Analyzing the US Air Force's New "Portable Hobby Drone Disruptors" Solicitation (vortex.com) 61
Lauren Weinstein writes: The U.S. Air Force has just issued a solicitation for a radio-based 'Portable Anti Drone Defense' system — essentially a remote drone disruption device that can be easily used by someone familiar with — well — shooting guns. The Air Force wants three units to start with. Delivery required 30 days after awarding of the contract. It does indeed make for interesting reading, and I thought it might be instructive to dig into the technical details a bit ...
Hang on (Score:3, Insightful)
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That would be a shotgun based 'Portable Anti Drone Defense' system
On a computer! (Score:3)
That would be a shotgun based 'Portable Anti Drone Defense' system
On a computer!
I'll take my patent now, please...
Shotguns for avoiding collateral damage (Score:3)
I've heard shotguns suggested for avoiding collateral damage in general, because shot doesn't have the range or ricochet of a regular bullet.
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Most shotguns fire lead shot, which is toxic.
Re: Shotguns for avoiding collateral damage (Score:1)
No, arrogant ignoramus, most shotguns fire whatever is put in them.
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And most used these days use lead shot as its cheaper and doesn't damage the barrel of the shotgun the way steel does.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Lead shot has been off the market for decades, I've got a few old boxes with lead bird shot in them, but i wouldn't trust them to go off when expected. Now Fowlers use steel shot.
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Did you forget to add "where I live" ... maybe?
Otherwise what I purchased just last week would either be illegal or worth it's weight in gold as they are stilt widely available in many a store, including online with the worlds foremost outfitters [cabelas.com]"
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Tokyo police are deploying their own drones with nets. The target drone gets trapped in the net instead of exploding and raining parts down on the people below.
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I've heard shotguns suggested for avoiding collateral damage in general, because shot doesn't have the range or ricochet of a regular bullet.
If you fire bird shot at or beyond approximately a 45 degree angle, you are correct. It will come down like hail, which is pretty minor. If you fire it substantially below that angle, you risk hitting something before it sheds its velocity. And there's lots of kinds of shot, so no guarantees eh? Regardless, there's no good excuse for firing shot into the air in populated locations. At best you're risking taking someone's eye out.
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Come on, man. You can't funnel 10 million dollars to one of your preferred bidders if you just go buy three shotguns.
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Can't they just use a shotgun?
I absolutely agree with you, is a very sporting idea for both drone owner and shooter but because that would not go along with the obvious agenda of the attack on the 2nd Amendment courtesy of the banksters that have enslaved the Queen of England who since 1864 has held the US as a corporation. Panzi Jew/Brit banksters afraid of guns when it's themselves they should fear and at this stage of the game should hold the same fear of cement trucks, ISIS and pretty much everyone they have screwed. Pretty soon t
Nope, just nope... (Score:2)
Delivery 30 days after awarding of contract...
Good luck with that.
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Well, considering that the design specs asks for a glorified, overpriced shotgun, I think the deadline is doable.
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Tough luck FCC (Score:3)
So the military wants a device that violates the conditions and implied license associated with the 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz ISM bands eh?
Does the US military have the authority to defy other government agencies such as the FCC and the FAA?
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I'm not an expert on this, but the answer is probably not what you expect.
Military use of radio is NOT regulated by the FCC, but by NTIA.
So that just because FCC regs mean that civilian users could not lawfully jam 2.4 ISM band, that does not answer the question of whether the military can.
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So the military wants a device that violates the conditions and implied license associated with the 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz ISM bands eh?
The problem with drones is not the frequency that they transmit, but that they fly where they aren't supposed to be. My cellphone's WiFi also uses 2.4GHz. That doesn't mean I can legally rob a bank while carrying it.
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That doesn't mean I can legally rob a bank while carrying it.
But you can legally carry it while robbing a bank.
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And you can carry a bank while robbing your phone.
I think that covers all the possibilities.
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I very much doubt USAF wants this for use on US soil against amateur drone operators, in any case. It's far more likely that they've noticed the heavy use of civilian drones for recon in many recent conflicts - e.g. both sides have used it that way in Ukraine, and there have also been reports from Syria along these lines.
Posse Comitatus (Score:2)
Two year's jail for the USAF.
Ha ha, I crack myself up!
Re:RPG (Score:4, Interesting)
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Works best if you point it at the drone operators.
Do they want the drone intact? (Score:2)
Do they want the drone intact afterwards, and what kind of range are they looking at? Up to about 50-60 meters a 12-gauge shotgun with #9-10 shot should pretty thoroughly disrupt any imaginable control and return-to-launch functions a drone could have, along with doing a pretty good job disrupting it's structural integrity. For longer ranges I'd use a custom round based on a rifled slug, tapered to a point like a rifle round for aerodynamics and filled with the same #9-10 shot around a timed dispersal charg
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No getting hi res consumer drone look down thats better than carrying a telescope like device up an open to the public hill or mountain range.
Any still accessible tracks, paths end under a camera, have detection systems. Contractors and mercenaries are then used to patrol areas up to fence lines, point to trespass signs
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That wouldn't slow down even the current generation of autonomous drones, which is what anyone serious about getting pictures inside a secured military base would be using. No sense in making yourself a target by broadcasting a nice traceable control signal after all. Drone's launched by the operator so no way to make it refuse to launch. Drone follows prescribed flight path using dead-reckoning off it's internal gyros, updated by GPS fixes (using commercially-available AGPS data to reduce reliance on the p
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Sure the flight will be long range and autonomous but that consumer drone signal chatter to the owner might still be trackable at some point during the average flight.
The only way around that would be a passive drone with zero communications as launched.
The magic of the autonomous drones use is the police c
Re: Do they want the drone intact? (Score:2)
Until you crack the Li battery after which your disabled recon vehicle becomes an active bomb.
Shouldn't be hard, actually (Score:2)
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All these consumer-grade drones are going to use one or a short list of control signal types, should be easy to jam, and only a little more difficult to override with a stronger signal and flat-out take control of the drone in question
That's not how these work. That not how any of this works. Not any more.
That's like saying you could take over someone's Amazon account by using a stronger WiFi signal.
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Now, for what it's worth: I used to work for a defense contractor that did quite a bit of ECM (electronic countermeasures) work, so I know that pretty much any radio signal can be jammed, and one of the ways to do that is to spoof the actual signal itself with an off-kilter copy of the actual signal. It's not far-fetched at all that a dev
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Consumer level drones doesn't really mean just off the shelf ready to fly. Hobby drones can have thier entire flight plan loaded before taking off, fly the route, and return without even transmitting or receiving radio signals in flight. The control computer can also encrypt its communication and take updates in flight encrypted so jamming a signal or broadcasting a stronger one will not be enough in all cases.
You will basically need to jam a signal so powerful that it floods the circuitry and interrupts th
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Yes indeed, it's not like that with Cell Phones either, that's why those stingrays don't work. You might not be able to take over someone's account with a stronger WiFi, but you can keep them out of it.
The MP's used to sit at the bottom of the hill at one of our HAWK missile Tac sites with their 100mW DC input Xband traffic radar giving out tickets for going 5 over. When the lads had enough of that they said "hello" with their 1KW DC input Xband target illuminating radar, the MP's put out the fire and never
For fighting drones en masse? (Score:2)
Do they mean to shoot down lots of drones at once? One threat to expensive military technology is being overwhelmed by a lot of cheap attacks.
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Wait for their control signal to be jammed then home in on the triangulated source of the disruption and use whatever 'tamper deterrence' measures have been built into them to neutralize the threat?
The missile equivalent's acronym is "HARM" - High speed Anti-Radiation Missile.
Replacing the missile component with a drone makes it a "HARD".
When in operation it would be a HARD-on.
Thanks, I'll be here all week!
Please remember to tip the burgers and try the waitresses!
Strat
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"Track on Jam"
Triangulate the source of the jamming (not difficult), lock in a course using the onboard IMU, accelerate to maximum speed possible with motors/controllers even if beyond normal safe parameters. Do not abort run under any circumstance.
One USAF jammer operator having a bad day.
Next jammer solicitation has an autonomous CIWS mount in it.
Next set of firmware has IR communication with a swarm of like minded drones who will continue the retribution run at all costs.
USAF ends up having to spec up a
Browsing through the deliverables ... (Score:1)
Must be able to disrupt communications on 2.4 and 5.8 GHz ISM bands, Stop autonomous waypoint flights
Why are these two clauses ganged in one line item? Why does the second clause start with a capital. This indicates they
"Don't shoot it, you'll only piss it off" (Score:2)
"Don't shoot it, you'll only piss it off"
Unless it's physical system (and the RFP makes it pretty clear that's not what they are asking for here), all you have to do is optically couple EMP shielded brains with an external radio system, and you can pretty much have it go after the source, lock on coordinates, and even if it's a momentary attack, the firing position goes "boom!".
I guess the military spends so much on their drones that they really can't conceive of using them in a Kamikaze attack; but if you
Link to the source, please... (Score:3)
Which is here:
https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=op... [fbo.gov]
Used to be that folks had the courtesy to do that, even though of course we understand that you want to drive traffic to your blog.
Re: other comments on shotgunning the things, (sounds like fun, but might do more harm than good if they fall in the wrong place), what they actually want is to disable the active control of the buggers:
"The Air Force Global Strike Command is requesting three (3) systems to counter unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), also commonly known as personal drones. There are three main areas in counter UAS (cUAS): detect, identify and defeat. This system should address the defeat portion. This portion needs to disrupt the control link between a commercial UAS and the pilot causing the UAS to fall into its preprogrammed "lost link" protocol. The system should provide the additional ability to disrupt the UAS's ability to receive and use satellite navigation signals (GPS and GLONASS) for navigation purposes."
Urm, maybe the latter might cause some hilarity if you're using it around an (air)port...
Also, loved this part:
"The system must have the below attributes:
Low complexity: no software, no firmware"
So they want this hard-wired from transistors, or better-still valves?
HAM radio boys everywhere, fire up your breadboards!
A happy and peaceful Christmas to all...