Camcopter S-100 – Convincing first flights onboard new French Navy OPV L´ADROIT

Vienna, 29 November 2011 Schiebel s CAMCOPTER® S-100 Unmanned Air System (UAS) has once again successfully proven its highly efficient maritime capability, this time onboard the new Gowind class OPV (Offshore Patrol Vessel), L ADROIT built by DCNS and handed over to the French Navy in October 2011.
Operating at the cutting edge of technology, the S-100 successfully completed a series of flights and trials onboard the L´ADROIT OPV at the beginning of November, under the command and control of the French Navy.

The L ADROIT is believed to be the first ship ever to be specifically designed to operate Unmanned Vehicles and has been fitted out to operate the maritime proven CAMCOPTER® S-100. Thanks to its modular system architecture, the unmanned helicopter could be easily managed.

“With the unmanned airborne system it is possible to gather information without tiring the crew and without exposing the crew towards an enemy and / or bacteriological and / or chemical hazards or also to act as communication relay.” said DCNS OPV Manager Mr. Denis Menage.

Camcopter 100

During the four days of operation in the Bay of Biscay, the CAMCOPTER® carried outeleven flights and 89 deck landings using a harpoon developed by Schiebel. As part of the trials, the S-100 used its electro-optical and infrared sensors to identify exercise potential threats such as small boats. It was shown that the UAS significantly increases the capability of the ship and the missions conducted during the trials demonstrated its high potential for surveillance, harbour and costal patrol, environmental protection, intelligence gathering, drug interdiction, anti-piracy tasks, as well as supporting search & rescue operations.

“This versatile and very capable UAV can fly a complex mission as planned, without any direct interaction from the operator it is fully automatic. It s positioning systems (a combination of GPS and inertial measurement) guarantee precise navigation and stability, necessary conditions for the accurate landing on a moving platform at sea, a naval spokesman supplemented.

We believe that embarking a tactical rotary UAS such as the CAMCOPTER® S-100 onboard such a ship will provide a step-change in its surveillance and reconnaissance capability in the future. The missions conducted during these trials aptly illustrate this enormous potential. Given the fact that many Navies seem to be focusing more on procuring smaller ships for future operations, coupled with the fact that indigenous manned helicopters are often too expensive, opens the door for UAS, such as the S-100.

This potential capability gap in terms of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance  (ISR) is where the S-100 fits in. commented Neil Hunter, Sales Director for Schiebel and

retired Naval Commander

Gary Mortimer

Founder and Editor of sUAS News | Gary Mortimer has been a commercial balloon pilot for 25 years and also flies full-size helicopters. Prior to that, he made tea and coffee in air traffic control towers across the UK as a member of the Royal Air Force.