![]() ![]() The first flight was in 1986, with an expectation that it would enter service in 1989, but the project suffered from numerous delays. The name Phoenix was taken from Project Phoenix, a late 1970s study into surveillance and target acquisition needs after cancellation of the unsuccessful development of Westland MRUASTAS to replace AN/USD501 Midge. A second UAV can be launched within a further eight minutes and up to two UAVs can be controlled from the same ground station. The UAV could be launched within an hour of reaching its launch site. The principal method of communication from the GCS to artillery on the ground was via the Battlefield Artillery Target Engagement System (BATES). ![]() Phoenix sensors provided imagery direct to the GCS where it was analysed and reported to artillery headquarters, to command level, or to a Phoenix troop command post. The zero-length take-off and landing was an essential requirement for operating in NATO's Central Region and deployment in a forward divisional area. The Phoenix was recovered by parachute, landing on its back, with a crushable "hump" on the back taking up the impact. The launch rail having been originally developed for the US Army Aquilla UAV that failed to enter service. Phoenix was 'zero-length' launch being projected into the air from a launch-rail mounted on the back of a truck. Phoenix was mostly made of Kevlar and other plastics. ![]() This tends to obstruct a sensor turret, and so the sensor payload, built around an infrared imager, was carried in a pod slung well under the fuselage. The Phoenix was a fairly typical combat surveillance UAV, powered by a 20 kW (26 hp) piston engine, but is distinctive in that it is a "tractor" aircraft, with the propeller in the front. It was the third generation of UAV in British Army service with the Royal Artillery after SD/1 and Canadair Midge. 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. The BAE Systems Phoenix (originally GEC-Marconi Phoenix) was an all-weather, day or night, real-time surveillance Unmanned Air Vehicle. British Army Phoenix Phoenix displayed at the former REME Museum of Technology site at Arborfield ![]()
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