- General Atomics GNAT
__NOTOC__ Infobox Aircraft
name=GNAT
caption=
type=Reconnaissance UAV
national origin=United States
manufacturer=General Atomics
designer=
first flight=avyear|1989
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variants with their own articles=The General Atomics GNAT is a reconnaissance
UAV developed in the United States in the late 1980s. As initiallly designed, it was a simplified version of theLSI Amber intended for foreign sales. The Gnat 750 made its first flight in 1989.The Gnat 750's configuration was similar to that of the Amber, except that the Gnat 750's wing was mounted low on the fuselage, instead of being mounted on a pylon on top. The Gnat 750 was somewhat larger than the Amber, but weighed less and could carry a heavier payload.
The Gnat 750 is powered by a
Rotax 912 piston flat-four four-cycle engine with 64 kW (85 hp). The UAV can fly to an operational area from 2,000 kilometers (1,240 miles) away and loiter there for 12 hours before returning home.Eight Gnat 750s were in development when General Atomics bought out LSI. General Atomics continued the program, which led to a contract from the Turkish government for a number of the UAVs in 1993.
By this time, the breakup of the old Communist states of Eastern Europe was in full swing, and the US government wanted to obtain an intelligence asset to help it deal with trouble spots in the region, specifically the former Yugoslavia. A contract was issued to General Atomics for Gnat 750s with minor modifications. The Gnat 750s were to be operated by the CIA.
The program encountered a number of difficulties, much of them due to bureaucratic factionalism and squabbling. One Gnat 750 crashed during tests when it was hit by a gust of wind, causing it to indicate zero airspeed. The UAV's software decided that meant it had landed and shut down the engine, causing the Gnat to fall to earth.
The Gnat 750 effort squeaked through, and in early 1994 the CIA sent a team equipped with a Gnat 750 to Albania to monitor events in the former Yugoslavia. The operation was not a success. The Gnat 750 suffered from a number of bugs and was limited by bad weather, and the team was finally withdrawn. However, the Gnat 750 continued to be built, leading to an "Improved Gnat" or "I-Gnat" variant, with a turbocharged engine and general overall refinements to increase reliability, reduce maintenance, and enhance capability. The Gnat 750 also led to a next-generation derivative, the "Gnat 750-45", much better known as the Predator.
General Atomics also used the Gnat 750 as the basis for a tactical UAV, known as the "Prowler". It looks much like a Gnat 750, but is cut down in size, with a span of 7.31 meters (24 ft) and a length of 4.24 meters (13.9 ft). It has an endurance of over 16 hours, and some commonality with Gnat 750 subsystems.
pecifications (GNAT 750)
aerospecs
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crew=None
capacity=
length m=5.00
length ft=16
length in=5
span m=10.75
span ft=35
span in=4
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height m=0.5
height ft=1
height in=8
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volume m3=
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aspect ratio=
empty weight kg=250
empty weight lb=560
gross weight kg=520
gross weight lb=1,140
lift kg=
lift lb=
eng1 number=1
eng1 type=Rotax 912
eng1 kw= 64
eng1 hp= 85
eng1 kn=
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max speed kmh=212
max speed mph=132
max speed mach=
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range km=
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endurance h= 48
endurance min=
ceiling m=7,600
ceiling ft=25,000
glide ratio=
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lists=References
This article contains material that originally came from the web article [http://www.vectorsite.net/twuav.html "Unmanned Aerial Vehicles"] by Greg Goebel, which exists in the Public Domain.
External links
* [http://www.fas.org/irp/program/collect/gnat-750.htm General Atomics GNAT-750] at the FAS
*http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/app4/gnat.html
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