China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stealth drone about to hit world market

China’s latest unmanned aircraft — the muscular CH-7 — to fly in 2019

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has been gaining a reputation as a rising supplier of advanced military drones in the internatio­nal market. In the latest developmen­t, the nation is offering a new attraction that may be irresistib­le to some buyers: the only stealth drone available in the market.

And it has even greater weapons-carrying capacity than some manned fighter jets.

The China Academy of Aerospace Aerodynami­cs, the country’s largest military drone exporter by number of products sold overseas, will display its latest combat model — the CH-7 high-altitude, long-endurance stealth drone — at the 12th China Internatio­nal Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition, sources from the academy told China Daily.

Commonly known as the Zhuhai Airshow, the exhibition is one of the largest arms shows in the world. This year’s event will open on Tuesday in Zhuhai in Guangdong province.

Globally, several aviation powers including the United States, Russia and France are developing stealth combat drones — for instance, the RQ-170 and X-47B of the US, and France’s Dassault nEUROn. However, these models are either not available in the internatio­nal market or are for experiment­al purposes only, rather than mass production. So the CH-7 will be the sole option for buyers wanting to field stealth combat drones, sources said.

Shi Wen, chief designer of the CH series, said the new model is scheduled to make its first flight in 2019, and if everything goes well, mass production and deliveries will follow around 2022.

He said that existing combat drones in the internatio­nal market are suitable for low-intensity warfare, such as counterter­rorism operations, but cannot handle high-tech conflicts that usually involve fighter jets or modern air-defense missiles. By comparison, the characteri­stics of the CH-7, such as its high speed and stealth capability, make it a good fit for high-tech confrontat­ions.

According to the aerospace academy, the CH-7 features a high operationa­l altitude, high speeds, long flight duration and outstandin­g survivabil­ity, and is intended for significan­t missions such as strategic reconnaiss­ance, electronic surveillan­ce and high-value target eliminatio­n.

Informatio­n from the academy said that the cutting-edge killing machine is also capable of detecting stealth fighter jets — such as the United States’ F-22 Raptor — and early-warning aircraft, and then providing guidance for manned combat planes to hit the targets.

The CH-7 has a flying wing design, with a wingspan of 22 meters and a length of 10 meters. Its maximum takeoff weight is an astonishin­g 13 metric tons, which means the drone is more powerful than some manned combat aircraft such as China’s JF-17 Thunder. By comparison, the CH-7’s predecesso­r, the CH-5, has a maximum takeoff weight of 3.3 tons and has already been called a “flying arsenal” because it can carry as many as 24 missiles on a single mission.

Driven by a single jet engine, the CH-7 is able to fly at about 920 kilometers per hour, roughly the cruising speed of a large jetliner. The unmanned aircraft’s flight ceiling is 13 kilometers, high enough to evade virtually all short-range and medium-range air-defense missiles. Its operationa­l radius is around 2,000 km.

The CH series of drones, designed and built by the academy, have been sold to militaries in more than 10 countries, making them the largest armed drone family China has exported, according to statistics from the academy.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A model of the CH-7 high-altitude, long-endurance stealth drone is displayed at the Zhuhai Airshow in Zhuhai, Guangdong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A model of the CH-7 high-altitude, long-endurance stealth drone is displayed at the Zhuhai Airshow in Zhuhai, Guangdong province.

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