miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2025

Czech VTOL developer Zuri secures backing from former Lilium suitor AAMG

UK to trial autonomous collaborative platforms alongside AH-64E Apache

GE Aerospace Kicks Off Hybrid-Electric Engine Runs

USA now has sufficient military assets in Caribbean to wage air campaign against Venezuela

Russia Claims It Prevented Plot to Steal MiG-31 Fighter Jet

France Strengthens Strategic Airlift Capacity with New A400M Transport Aircraft

ZeroAvia and Hybrid Air Vehicles to Develop Hydrogen-Powered Airlander 10

Embraer A-29 Super Tucano Gains New Capability to Counter Unmanned Aerial

Belgium calls in foreign forces to counter mysterious drone incursions

El Consejo de Ministros aprueba las ayudas para desarrollar el programa de guerra electrónica Santiago II



  • Qué es: Real Decreto que regula la concesión directa de préstamos para el programa Sustitución de Sistemas Anteriores en el Espectro Electromagnético – Santiago Fase II. El objetivo es modernizar y sustituir sistemas previos en el espectro electromagnético para la defensa y la seguridad nacional.

  • Naturaleza del programa: Santiago es un sistema conjunto de inteligencia de señales de las Fuerzas Armadas. El programa se divide en tres subprogramas ejecutados por distintas entidades privadas o mixtas:

    • REE-SCAPA y SCAPA: estudio y definición de una plataforma aérea tripulada y de capacidades de inteligencia de señales sobre plataforma aérea.
    • REE-EW: modernización de los sistemas de Guerra Electrónica desplegables del Ejército y la Armada (EW desplegable).
    • REE-SIVIGAC: sistema de vigilancia acústica (vigilancia acústica).
  • Entidades beneficiarias y montos de préstamos:

    • UTE Airbus Defence And Space y Indra Sistemas: 5,99 millones de euros (para SCAPA y REE-SCAPA).
    • Indra Sistemas: 182 millones de euros (para la modernización de los sistemas de Guerra Electrónica desplegables, REE-EW).
    • Sociedad Anónima de Electrónica Submarina (SAES): 10 millones de euros (para REE-SIVIGAC).
  • Plazo y condiciones financieras: préstamos directos con una duración prevista de cuatro años, con posibilidad de prórroga de hasta dos años. Se justifica por motivos de interés público y de defensa nacional; busca mantener control de diseño y capacidades tecnológicas, además de fomentar la industria española.

  • Contexto estratégico: forma parte del Plan Industrial y Tecnológico para la Seguridad y la Defensa, aprobado por el Gobierno en abril de 2025, en respuesta a amenazas modernas y a la necesidad de modernizar capacidades de EW y vigilancia.

  • Propósito general: facilitar la sustitución de sistemas antiguos en el espectro electromagnético, asegurar capacidades de defensa y seguridad, y promover la participación de la industria nacional en proyectos estratégicos de alta tecnología.

martes, 11 de noviembre de 2025

BAE Systems, TAI Expand UK-Turkey Defense Ties With Joint Drone Building Deal 

[España] El Gobierno actualiza el Reglamento de Matriculación de Aeronaves Civiles

  •  Se ha aprobado un Real Decreto que da seguridad jurídica sobre las aeronaves obligadas a inscribirse en el Registro de Matrícula de Aeronaves Civiles.
  • Las aeronaves matriculadas en alguno de los Estados de la UE o de terceros países europeos que participen en la Agencia Europea para la Seguridad Aérea, podrán ser utilizadas en España sin necesidad de inscribirlas en el Registro español.
  • Determinadas aeronaves ultraligeras motorizadas, con una masa máxima autorizada al despegue igual o inferior a 120 kg, no necesitarán inscribirse en el Registro ni tampoco necesitarán obtener un certificado de aeronavegabilidad.
  • Se refuerza así la naturaleza administrativa del citado Registro y se agilizan sus procedimientos administrativos.

https://www.transportes.gob.es/el-ministerio/sala-de-prensa/noticias/mar-11112025-1342-0 

NATO military aircraft belonging to Turkey 'breaks apart' in the sky and crashes down in Georgia after taking off in Azerbaijan | Daily Mail Online

Un día como hoy hace 42 años: Primer vuelo del CASA-Nurtanio CN235

B-52 Spotted for the Second Time Carrying Air Force’s Next-Gen Stealth Nuclear Cruise Missile

Azerbaijan confirms JF-17 fighter acceptance with Baku flypast

A330, 787 crews failed to recognise reduced runway operations at Melbourne

Europe Delivers Fourth Orion Service Module for NASA’s Artemis Lunar Program

easyJet marks 30th anniversary with “Generation easyJet” flight and report on low-cost travel’s cultural impact

Trump threatens to replace absent unpaid air traffic controllers with “patriots” amid shutdown

EASA SAFE 360° 2025: Rethinking Safety in a Complex World

UAS and Military Rotorcraft - Innovation and Adaptation


IA Summary:

Concise English summary of the Global Defence Aviation Conference 2025 (GDA25), Warsaw, 21–23 October 2025

Overview

  • GDA25 gathered more than 900 delegates, 100 industry exhibitors, and military aviation representatives from 85 countries to examine how Uncrewed Aerial Systems (UAS) and military rotorcraft are reshaping modern air power. Over three days, discussions focused on technology adaptation driven by Ukraine, as well as advances in autonomy, electronic warfare (EW), and manned-unmanned teaming (MUM-T).

Participants and supporters

  • RAeS industry partners and supporters included BAE Systems, Airbus, RTX, Leonardo, General Dynamics, Safran, Thales, Martin Baker, Lockheed Martin (Sikorsky), MOOG, L3Harris, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Artemis Smith Myers, QinetiQ, Anduril, Inzpire, Saab, Vertical Aerospace, among others. RAeS and other defence stakeholders participated to explore future capabilities and interoperability.

Day One – The urgency of modernization

  • Drone incursions into Polish airspace underscored the urgency of national modernization efforts to defend against proliferating drone threats.
  • Leonardo showcased Proteus, an autonomous UAS developed with the Royal Navy; first flight anticipated before the end of 2025. Its modular payload bay supports missions from ISR and ASW to logistics, illustrating a modular, scalable design philosophy for next‑gen military aviation.
  • The UK Defence Investment Plan was a recurring theme, aiming to accelerate acquisition cycles and break silos, with a National Armaments Director to streamline procurement and keep pace with rapid UAS development and rotorcraft innovation. Interoperability and allied collaboration are critical, framed as “NATO first but not NATO only.”
  • France reiterated the continued relevance of crewed helicopters amid dronisation, highlighting the H160M Guépard MUM-T program (with Thales and Airbus), which achieved a first prototype flight and aims for deliveries in 2029.
  • Airbus outlined its transition from a traditional OEM to an agile military support organization, embedding maintenance teams with end-user operations and testing new Air-Launched Effect (ALE) systems for rotorcraft deployment in France, Spain, and Germany.
  • Geography and extreme conditions shaped innovation: the Royal Canadian Air Force discussed its recapitalisation program (2026–2032) to operate in cold climates, including the need to cold-start after 24 hours at −40°C; Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS) for emergency rescue in the High North were proposed as part of humanitarian and mission-critical operations.
  • Central Europe and Ukraine: the Czech Air Force advanced toward Initial Operating Capability for UH-1Y Venom and AH-1Z Viper fleets by 2026, with pilots training in counter-UAS missions informed by Ukraine experiences. The Ukrainian Army Aviation shared frontline lessons on helicopter–drone operations in a modern warfare environment.
  • Ukraine’s conflict context framed the day: discussions highlighted how drones and rotorcraft are operating as a live laboratory for tactics and training, emphasizing rapid adaptation and the importance of understanding the operational environment.

Day Two – MUM-T, Counter-UAS, and the expanding battlespace

  • Sessions on defence helicopters, UAS, and operational effects addressed whether helicopters have a future in a drone-dominated world. Germany explored a model where uncrewed systems lead missions, with crewed aircraft acting as command nodes for drone swarms; however, heavy-lift operations are expected to remain crewed for the near- to mid-term.
  • France and logistics automation: the French Navy is automating logistics while keeping crewed combat platforms for the human element; ongoing consideration of unmanned systems supporting logistics and combat roles.
  • Recruitment dynamics: Western militaries cited declining recruitment as a driver for expanding UAS and unmanned platforms.
  • Counter-UAS (C-UAS) and EW: the British Army tested pod-based EW suites and camera-linked sensors to detect FPV drones, with proposals to deploy friendly FPV drones from crewed helicopters as a countermeasure.
  • Turkish capabilities: Turkish Air Force presented UAS as central to counter-terrorism, delivering 24/7 ISR and precision strike capabilities; TB2 and Akinci are being navalised, while Kizilelma and Anka-3 will operate alongside crewed aircraft.
  • European integration: the European Defence Agency (EDA) is pursuing integration of UAS into European airspace by 2030, focusing on harmonised operations, risk assessment, and training; Eurodrone integration and safe, interoperable UAS operations were highlighted, with Robin Radar’s IRIS CUAS using AI and Doppler sensors for threat classification.
  • Western force concepts: the Royal Navy envisions a dispersed, digitally connected fleet combining crewed, uncrewed, and autonomous platforms, with the human factor remaining decisive.
  • Innovation and EW: General Dynamics showcased AI-enabled UAVs with mission planning, swarm autonomy, and adaptive EW within open-architecture digital systems, emphasizing human-in-the-loop targeting.
  • Demonstrations and procurements: Northrop Grumman demonstrated the Common Infrared Countermeasures (CIRCM) survivability system; Frontex outlined plans to extend UAS border surveillance to high-altitude platforms by 2026; NSIA discussed joint MQ-9B procurement for interoperability; Skytrac presented MUM-T examples integrating Schiebel rotor drones with the UK Coastguard for maritime SAR with real-time video via Starlink and Iridium; anti-icing research for UAS highlighted endurance and safety challenges in adverse conditions.
  • Interoperability lessons: attendees stressed building interoperability and standardization from the outset to meet future needs.

Day Three – Combat lessons and the human element

  • Ukraine’s air war remained central, illustrating how the convergence of drones and rotorcraft compelled rapid tactical adaptation and training. Drone attacks have become ubiquitous, with a spectrum of countermeasures from EW to kinetic interception by helicopters.
  • Hybrid readiness: the Finnish Utti Jaeger Regiment demonstrated integrated capabilities across naval, police, and special operations domains as part of hybrid warfare readiness.
  • JAPCC perspectives: analyses of helicopters vs. drones in Ukraine highlighted operational ranges, drone types, and counter-drone measures such as jamming, nets, drone-on-drone tactics, and the need for NATO‑level strategies built with Ukrainian industry and tactical units.
  • Education during conflict: Kharkiv National Air Force University (KNAUF) demonstrated remote learning, AR/VR simulation, and combat mobilization of staff and students.
  • IDF insights: following the October 7 attacks, Israeli helicopter crews faced hostile fire en route to Gaza, underscoring the need for realistic, adaptive training; helicopters remain indispensable for rapid troop transport, medevac, and counter-UAS missions even in drone-saturated environments.
  • EW closing discussion: UAS operate across 150 MHz to 2,700 MHz; counter-jamming requires multiple EW systems per vehicle, and cautions about digital signatures on the battlefield—dense mobile signals can be as dangerous as a flare.
  • Industrial proposals and advances: Sikorsky unveiled the Nomad UAS family and the S-70 UAS U-Hawk prototype, a fully autonomous rotorcraft capable of lifting 10,000 lb payloads, signaling a major step in vertical logistics automation and the role of AI and autonomy in rotor operations.
  • Synthesis: technology, teaming, and the future force. The Royal Navy stressed that “the future force will be hybrid—uncrewed where possible, crewed where necessary, but always human-led.”
  • Conclusion: as air forces adapt to drones, EW, and AI-driven decision loops, operational success will hinge on human adaptability and collaboration with advanced systems. The path forward points to a hybrid, human-led force where unmanned capabilities extend reach, but humans retain leadership and responsibility.

Boeing gets nod to start next phase of 777X certification trials, Air Current reports | Reuters

lunes, 10 de noviembre de 2025

B-52s Deploy to Spain for Bomber Task Force 26-1

LBA Systems to Build TB2, TB3, Akinci and Kizilelma UCAVs in Italy

Rolls-Royce reveals new XE standard for Trent 1000 engines

SJ-100’s domestic engines tested for resilience to water ingestion

Russia’s Su-57 fighter to take part in flying display at Dubai air show

UK, Japan, Italy Push Forward With Next-Generation GCAP Fighter Development

Belgium to Modernize Pilot Training Fleet with New Pilatus PC-7 MKX Aircraft

China’s Fujian Aircraft Carrier Set to Enter Regular High-Seas Operations

Nationwide flight chaos in the U.S. as FAA limits operations amid government shutdown

Liège Airport faces third drone disruption in three days

Of fiber-optics and FPVs – 6 questions with a Ukrainian drone trainer

Bombardier sees growing role for defence unit amid year-end delivery ramp-up | Flight Global

South Korea To Build Full-Scale Stealth Fighter Demo | Aviation Week Network

domingo, 9 de noviembre de 2025

UPS and FedEx ground some cargo planes after Kentucky air disaster

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2pr5y7p90o

UPS said the decision to ground MD-11 models followed instructions from manufacturer Boeing, while rival delivery giant FedEx confirmed it would follow suit.

jueves, 6 de noviembre de 2025

Mini "Chinook" : Tiny tandem-rotor copter could one day be your ride to work

Flight delays persist as government shutdown leads to air traffic controller shortages

First civil trial over 737 Max crash in Ethiopia begins, as Boeing settles three more lawsuits

B-21 Raider Plan Could See Second Pilot Replaced with WSO

The Netherlands Transferred 18 F-16s to Romania for the Price of a Single Euro

Clean Aviation lays out goals for next project call as RISE engine waits for TAKE OFF clearance

British Airways seeks ‘double-whammy win’ from targeted SAF use to prevent contrail formation

Airbus builds towards final destructive tests on Wing of Tomorrow demonstrator

Airbus advances on critical fuel cell technology milestones for ZEROe programme

Russian Military Transport Plane Linked to Wagner Group Lands in Venezuela Amid Rising Tensions

General Atomics Unveils Gambit 6 Combat Drone with Advanced Air-to-Ground Capabilities

Bombardier Global 8000, World’s Fastest Business Jet, Awarded Transport Canada Type Certification

Portugal Seeks Competition Between U.S. and European Jets for F-16 Replacement

Belgian airspace lockdown: Brussels, Charleroi and Liège airports temporarily closed after multiple drone sightings

Drone incident above Belgium: economic damage likely runs into millions

Brussels Airport closed after drones spotted over airfield — flights diverting

SAF is no ‘silver bullet’, says ex-Productivity Commissioner

Paul Lindwall, who presided over the Productivity Commission's 2019 Economic Regulation of Airports inquiry, has cast doubt on SAF's environmental credentials, calling it in an op-ed in the Australian Financial Review "an expensive, inefficient distraction from viable alternatives".

A ‘Crazy’ Tesla Flying Car is Coming

Musk Claims the Tech Could Be Unveiled Within a Couple of Months Elon Musk is once again promising the impossible…this time, in the form of a Tesla that flies

Ukrainian fighter pilot says the Gripen is the only fighter in the world for which he'd sell his soul

miércoles, 5 de noviembre de 2025

[Podcast] Análisis de defensa: de compras masivas de cazas, drones y más

 https://blog.sandglasspatrol.com/podcast-analisis-de-defensa-de-compras-masivas-de-cazas-drones-y-mas/

Ukraine Adventure: Table of Contents | Patreon

B-52 Spotted During Testing of Unidentified Weapon - The Aviationist

Embraer cancels turboprop aircraft development project due to engine technology limitations | Flight Global

Live update: UPS plane crash near Louisville, Kentucky, airport, at least 7 killed, 11 injured | CNN

martes, 4 de noviembre de 2025

Saab Highlights Gripen E and GlobalEye Warning System at Dubai Airshow

Korean Air Completes Key ‘Air Taxi’ Safety Trials in South Korea

Anniversary Marks Laika’s Tragic, Pioneering First Orbit of Earth

New drone sightings reported over Belgium’s Air Bases anb Airports

sábado, 1 de noviembre de 2025

The Ukrainian Air Force Is About To Get A Lot Bigger & Better: 250 New Fighters Coming Soon

USAF Aims for 1,558 Combat Jets by Ten Years, Eyes Higher F-35 and F-15EX Output - The Aviationist

Boeing Boosts RAAF P-8A Capability with Major Upgrades, Aircraft Delivery

U.S. Soldier Commands Autonomous Black Hawk in Historic Military Exercise – Aviation News:



Aviation News – A U.S. soldier has successfully commanded Lockheed Martin Sikorsky's Optionally Piloted Black Hawk helicopter in real-world military exercises, marking a major step...

Korean Air Orders Airbus A350 Freighters in Major Fleet Expansion – Aviation News:

Pentagon to Acquire 30,000 Low-Cost Drones in Major Push for Domestic Production – Aviation News:

SWISS grounds entire Airbus A220-100 fleet amid engine shortages and operational shift - Aviation24.be

Miami investor used fraud to buy dozens of Boeing 737s, FBI says | The Seattle Times

New Chinese Tandem Rotor Drone Takes Off: Boying T1400 Makes Maiden Flight – Aviation News:

VietJet ends COMAC C909 operations, undermining China's global jet ambitions - Aviation24.be

UK Police Deploying Drones over London Streets - The Aviationist

Airbus Ramps Up A320 Production With 75 Aircraft Per Month Target

China’s GJ-21 Naval UCAV Captured in Clearest Image Yet - The Aviationist

IAI's B767-300ER MMTT Set to Replenish IAF's Aerial Refueling Fleet: A Cost-Effective, Multi-Role Boost for India's Skies - Indian Defence Research Wing

Why India's Private Sector Shies Away from Becoming the Next Lockheed Martin: The AMCA Consortium Reality - Indian Defence Research Wing

Radical flies full-size prototype for stratospheric drone – GeekWire

How US Engines Ended Up Powering Russia’s Jet-Powered Shahed Drones — UNITED24 Media

Boeing Faces Five-Year Race to Deliver All F-15EX Jets for U.S. With No Room Left for Export Buyers | Defense Express

China Shows Rare Look at Shahed-Like Drone Fired From Truck Launcher - Business Insider

Carbon Cub UL Reaches 37,609 Feet in Record-Breaking Climb

viernes, 31 de octubre de 2025

Anduril's YFQ-44 Fury 'Fighter' Drone Has Flown

JetBlue Airbus A320 makes emergency landing in Florida after sudden 5,000 metre dive: fifteen injured

Ukrainian soldiers neutralize Russian Molniya-2 drone using electronic warfare systems

The Russified SJ-100: A Double-Edged Sword for HAL and India's Aerospace Dreams - Indian Defence Research Wing

Russia Unveils Robotic ZU-23-2 Air Defense System — Yet Western Systems Still Outshine It | Defense Express

Russia’s New Laser Weapon Breaks Cover — And It’s on Wheels

Russian Forces Use Suicide Drones Equipped With Anti-Tank Mines in New Escalation — UNITED24 Media

​From FPV to Fixed-Wing: russia Equips Molniya Drones with Machine Vision | Defense Express