AgilePod Flies on U.S. Air Force MQ-9 Reaper
In March 2018, the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center’s Sensors Program Office, working jointly with the AFLCMC Medium Altitude Unmanned Aerial Systems Program Office, sponsored three demonstration flights of an MQ-9 Reaper with AgilePod. The flights were a first for AgilePod on an Air Force major weapon system, and were the result of collaboration between AFLCMC and the Air Force Research Lab.
“These flights mark the culmination of more than two years of cutting-edge technology development led by our colleagues within the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Materials and Manufacturing Directorate ManTech team, and Sensors Directorate Blue Guardian team,” said Lt. Col. Elwood Waddell, the advanced technologies branch chief within the Sensors Program Office.”
The AgilePod program will offer a family of non-proprietary, government-owned pods of several sizes that can accommodate various missions, quickly change payloads and fit on multiple platforms. The program uses open adaptable architecture and standards-based design to ensure maximum flexibility without proprietary constraints.
“The AgilePod program began with a desire to bring agile manufacturing practices to the ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] enterprise, culminating in a wholly government-owned, open architecture ISR capability that was both payload and platform agnostic,” said Andrew Soine, a program manager with AFRL’s Materials and Manufacturing Directorate.
“Blue Guardian’s mission is to rapidly demonstrate emerging sensor technology,” added Capt. Juliana Nine, a program manager with AFRL’s Sensors Directorate. “These MQ-9 flights did exactly that. The open adaptable architecture based on Open Mission Systems and common electrical/mechanical interfaces developed by the Blue Guardian team enabled the rapid re-configurability of the sensors inside the AgilePod. This capability will help the warfighter adapt their sensor payloads as the mission dictates.”
U.S. Air Force ownership of the registered trademark for AgilePod is key to the program, giving the Air Force the authority to designate a given pod as an AgilePod. This cultivates a highly collaborative relationship with industry partners as the Air Force shares existing technical data under the protection of an Information Transfer Agreement. The agreement enables the sharing of all government technical data on AgilePod while protecting government ownership and enabling industry innovation.
For the demonstration, the Air Force partnered with Leidos (facilitated the open architecture sensor integration), the University of Dayton Research Institute (implemented the open software for sensor command and control), AdamWorks (built the AgilePod) and General Atomics (integrated the podded system onto the MQ-9 aircraft).
Top Stories
INSIDERAerospace
NASA’s Quiet Supersonic Demonstrator Jet Completes First Flight
INSIDERDesign
Algorithms for Autonomous Marine Vehicles
INSIDERDesign
F-35 Proves Nuke Drop Performance in Stockpile Flight Testing
INSIDERLighting Technology
Using Ultrabright X-Rays to Test Materials for Ultrafast Aircraft
INSIDERMechanical & Fluid Systems
Stevens Researchers Test Morkovin's Hypothesis for Major Hypersonic Flight...
INSIDERSoftware
Webcasts
Software
Optimizing Production Processes with the Virtual Twin
Power
EV and Battery Thermal Management Strategies
Manufacturing & Prototyping
How Packet Digital Is Scaling Domestic Drone Battery Manufacturing
Automotive
Advancements in Zinc Die Casting Technology & Alloys for Next-Generation...
Automotive
Vehicle Test with R-444A: Better-Performing R-1234yf Direct Replacement for...
Test & Measurement
Vibroacoustic and Shock Analysis for Aerospace and Defense Applications



