September 23, 2007:
The U.S.
Air Force has bought 36 Predator MQ-9A Reaper UAVs (sometimes called "Predator B). That's just for the aircraft, the
sensors and support gear cost millions more. Total cost for a Reaper can be close to $10 million. So far, Predators have flown over
25,000 sorties, and spent over 300,000 hours in the air. The Predator UAV fleet, of
about a hundred aircraft, is currently flying about 10,000 hours a month. The
MQ-9A and MQ-9B is used mainly for combat
missions, and comes equipped to carry Hellfire missiles or smart bombs.
The air force has ordered
nearly 300 Predators so far, and a quarter of those are not yet delivered. Most
of the ones in use are Predator As, which cost $4.5 (complete) and can stay in
the air for up to 40 hours, but the average sortie is closer to 12 hours. The Reapers
will serve in separate "attack squadrons." The Predators are in
reconnaissance squadrons. The Reaper
will operate in sections of four aircraft, one of which can be in the air at a
time. As with the Predator, Reaper flight crews (usually a pilot and one sensor
operator) are based back in the United States, with only maintenance personnel
going overseas.