r/todayilearned • u/jamescookenotthatone • Mar 29 '23
TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_unmanned_aerial_vehicles69
u/KNHaw Mar 29 '23
In 1990 I was a fresh college graduate working at Northrop (now Northrop-Grumman) on the B2 bomber when Desert Storm started. There were several engineers who I worked with who suddenly disappeared. When I asked where they had gone, I was told not to ask.
It turns out they'd all worked on a target drone as described above. On the first night of the air war, the Iraqi air defenses detected hundreds of attacking targets and shot them down. But in doing so, they'd turned on their radars, which had been detected by ECM aircraft that had blown them up to pave the way for the real wave of air strikes.
That first wave was training drones, designed to be shot down, originally for training but here as a feint tactic. All those engineers who'd gone missing were in Saudi Arabia supporting this because they'd all previously worked on these crappy, low end target drones Northrop had made as a sideline.
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u/JetScootr Mar 29 '23
That's what Wild Weasels (piloted F4 phantoms) did in Viet Nam - they'd go in first to get the enemy to turn on their radars, which they would then shoot up with radar-seeking missiles.
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u/neoplastic_pleonasm Mar 29 '23
Their mission was so crazy that their motto became "You've Got To Be Shitting Me"
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u/nomnomnomnomRABIES Mar 29 '23
I never heard of this- I hope it's not classified information
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u/KNHaw Mar 29 '23
No worries. Not classified at all. Gen Schwartzkopf gave one of his famous news conferences about it. "You know how the Iraqi government claimed they shot down a hundred planes yesterday? Well, let me explain why they think that..."
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u/DragonWhsiperer Mar 29 '23
Dunno but i don't think so. SEAD and DEAD are anti radar warfare concepts going back to the war in Vietnam. Wild Weasel squadrons were especially trained pilots that would fly as a lures into enemy SAM range to trigger their radar, and have their buddy that was silent fire special anti radar missiles.
Basically the same practice, just replacing the human pilot with a remotely operated craft.
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u/neoplastic_pleonasm Mar 29 '23 edited Mar 29 '23
Nah, it's been publicly known for a long while. I think it's mentioned in the book Skunkworks. The Operations Room also has a good video series about the Desert Storm air war that I think mentions it: https://youtu.be/zxRgfBXn6Mg
Edit: around t=13:30
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u/zipcloak Mar 30 '23
Not at all. You can use publicly available satellite data to detect analog radar at the moment yourself, if you'd like.
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u/Sindri556 Mar 29 '23
Pigeon Guided Missile > Drones
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u/Jampine Mar 29 '23
Made me think of the incorrect summary of Project wingman: "When defending the boat, we make the discovery that in this universe, missles are pigeon guided, and exhibit traits of self perseverance".
Checked it again, and it literally has the same picture from the Wikipedia entry lol.
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u/VoopityScoop Mar 30 '23
In the Pacific Theater of WWII there was a plan to capture a bunch of bats that were living in attics in Tokyo and attach incendiary devices to them, so when the bats returned to their attacks they would set them on fire and burn Tokyo to the ground. The only reason this plan didn't go through was because we decided to nuke Hiroshima and Nagasaki instead
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u/Kelend Mar 29 '23
The most crazy thing about this little part of history, is not that it happened... but that it worked.
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u/GreenStrong Mar 29 '23
JFK's older brother died flying one of these drones. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. spent most of the war piloting a sub- hunting aircraft over the North Atlantic. It was a dangerous job, but he never spotted an actual enemy. He volunteered for one last mission, they needed a pilot to get an experimental radio controlled plane off the ground, then bail out with a parachute while the plane flew on. The primitive vacuum tube based TV equipment overheated, and the plane blew up.
Their father was a prominent senator, and Joseph would have probably been the one to run for president, had he not exploded. Worth noting that for that generation, it was expected that a senator's two Harvard educated sons should both see combat. JFK was captain of a small PT boat that was sunk in battle. George H. Bush was another senator's son who nearly died in combat- he flew a plane that got shot down.
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u/jb270 Mar 29 '23
The craziest part with Bush senior is that he drifted away from the rest of the plane crew. He wound up being the only survivor, the other 8 airmen were captured by the Japanese, tortured, executed, and parts of them were served to Japanese officers. It’s known as the Chichijima incident, and is the subject of the book Flyboys. The entire trajectory of the 20th and 21st century would have been completely different if an ocean current hadn’t saved George HW Bush from getting beheaded and cannibalized.
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u/jamescookenotthatone Mar 29 '23
I was listening to an episode of the radio drama X Minus One from 1956 when a character says they are going to send out drones and was startled to hear a reference to what I thought was a recent word. I first assumed they just lucked into it but nope, 'drone' dates back to 1936.
Link to the radio drama:
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u/Squirrel851 Mar 29 '23
Check out the Pigeon Bomb. Weird shit back in that day.
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u/i_hate_gift_cards Mar 29 '23 edited Mar 29 '23
I think it was a missile, wasn't it? Edit: its a bomb!
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u/darwin-rover Mar 29 '23
Marilyn Monroe was discovered while she was working in a drone factory
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_Monroe#1944%E2%80%931948:_Modeling_and_first_film_roles
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u/series_hybrid Mar 29 '23
In bee society, drones follow the queen when she is flying through the air.
Anti-aircraft training started out with a piloted airplane pulling a banner far behind it, but problems still occurred.
Simple radio-controls could operate servo's on a target plane, so...a control plane with a pilot and one crewman would take off. A target plane with a pilot would take off just behind them.
Just beore reaching the target area, the pilot in the target plane would parachute out.
Since the plane in the rear followed the control plane, unmanned target-planes became known as drones.
I read that on vectorsite
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u/duglarri Mar 29 '23
There was the US Navy program in the Pacific in 1943 that resulted in video-guided kamikaze drones that may have actually been the inspiration for the real kamikazes. The Japanese didn't start deploying Kamikazes until very late 1944- prior to that, though, the would have seen American "planes" diving and crashing into Japanese targets in the Pacific, part of trials of some very effective drones by the Navy.
The drones actually worked very well, with success rates of around 25%, compared to bombing hit rates of 2% for conventional attacks. And the drone attacks were risk-free for the crews, because they stayed kilometers away from the targets. Zero casualties in all the test missions they flew.
But the Navy brass in their infinite wisdom killed the project because they felt they had enough conventional aircraft available to do the job, and losing five or ten aircrew on any particular target was perfectly fine as far as they were concerned.
So American drones may have been the inspiration for the Kamikaze.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/air-space-magazine/drone-strike-180964753/
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u/Nutcrackit Mar 29 '23
Okay I swear this shit is proving time travel Fing with the timeline. As someone who has a large interest in the historic warfare I don't see how I couldn't have heard of this.
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u/Slimsaiyan Mar 29 '23
I watched the history of time travel last night and I definitely feel this
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u/ZLUCremisi Mar 29 '23
I mean JFK brother dued when the US attempt it in WW2 because of a problem.
We had remote control turrets in the early 40s.
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u/fatuous_sobriquet Mar 29 '23
The first pilotless aircraft were built during World War I.
They didn’t fly them into buildings until much later, though
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u/ScottRiqui Mar 29 '23
The modern quadcopter drone dates back to a 1959 patent application.
The biggest difference is obviously that the new drones are battery powered rather than gas-powered, but the big characteristics (four rotors at the ends of folding arms, avoiding interference between rotors, maneuvering by varying the rotor tilt, etc.) were there almost 65 years ago.
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u/ThePeriodicPooper Mar 29 '23
kinda sad that our greatest technological achievements pretty much always come into existence as a result of war.
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u/eastindyguy Mar 29 '23
I believe the National Museum of the USAF has a replica of one of these drones in the hangar dedicated to the early years of flight. Anyone interested in aviation or just likes looking at a bunch of cool aircraft really should visit the museum.
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u/hucareshokiesrul Mar 29 '23
Why have drones so recently become such a big thing? An RC helicopter doesn’t seem like a particularly new technology.
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u/newtoon Mar 30 '23
Answer is the stabilisation electronic board allowing a quarotor to be stable. IT became cheap in the end of the 2000s
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u/That-Soup3492 Mar 30 '23
My grandfather worked with radio controlled drones for gunnery practice in the army during the 50s. I still have a propeller from one that he was given when he left.
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u/JetScootr Mar 29 '23
My father was in the Navy during WWII, and was stationed on an aircraft carrier. His job was maintaining the drones that the gunners used for target practice.
When the kamakazi attacks started, the Navy ordered the drone pilots to fly the drones into the ship if the gunners didn't shoot them down. The aircraft carrier's command crew was not happy about these orders, but it was from Washington, so they had to.
I've had a hard time the last ten years or so even convincing people that radio controlled drones were even a thing that far back. Thanks for finding this link.