The Mercury News

Air Force training drone washes ashore on a Florida beach

- By Shirin Ali

Beachcombe­rs in southeast Florida got a surprise last week when the tide brought forth a 20-foot aerial target drone used by the U.S. Air Force.

The drone, part of the Air Force’s weapons system evaluation program, was found Friday on the shore of Boynton Beach in southeast Florida’s Palm Beach County. It was quickly recovered by the Air Force and never posed a threat to the public.

Lt. Savannah Bray, spokeswoma­n for the US Air Force’s 53rd Wing, told CNN that the BQM167A drone is a subscale target drone used specifical­ly for training exercises throughout the entire military. The drones are used to test weapons systems and train fighter pilots during live-fire exercises.

“They are flown remotely, and they simulate a real air-to-air combat mission,” said Bray, adding that shooting down one of these drones would be like firing at an enemy aircraft.

Air Force officials were called to Boynton Beach and the drone was removed within a few hours. Bray estimated that the BQM-167A found was likely shot down during a training exercise that occurred two to three sessions ago. The Air Force’s 53rd Wing conducts training exercises year round, with one held roughly every month.

The Air Force recovers the drones, either by boat rescues or through a parachute recovery system, as the drones can be repaired, tested and reused, according to the Air Force.

The 82nd Aerial Targets Squadron operates and maintains the drones at Tyndall Air Force Base located 12 miles east of Panama City on the Florida Panhandle. The squadron maintains three 120-foot drone recovery vessels and four smaller patrol boats, the only vessels in the Air Force, to recover the drones and support range safety.

 ?? WFOR ?? A military drone washed ashore in Boynton Beach, Florida, on Friday.
WFOR A military drone washed ashore in Boynton Beach, Florida, on Friday.

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