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Iran's New Hi-Tech Drone Flies Over Tuesday Drills Zone

another copy of Israeli drone
Luftwaffe+German+AIr+Force+Heron+2+Mahatz+2+Heron+TP+Eitan+ii+II++turboprop+engine+Eitan%252C+the+force%2527s+largest+UAV.+Eitan%252C+a+High-Altitude+Long-Endurance+%2528HALE%2529+UAV++%25281%2529.jpg

I do not understand some people, what do you actually think drones should look like?
I mean the engineers do not design the drones like it is a beauty competition. It is about the aerodynamics and air drag and so on. So how can one claim something is copied by a similiar appearance? I mean should we design a drone looking like a M1A1? Seriously? It is completly natural that planes drones and whatever flys looks similiar...
 
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I do not understand some people, what do you actually think drones should look like?
I mean the engineers do not design the drones like it is a beauty competition. It is about the aerodynamics and air drag and so on. So how can one claim something is copied by a similiar appearance? I mean should we design a drone looking like a M1A1? Seriously? It is completly natural that planes drones and whatever flys looks similiar...
Do me a favour, there's a difference between a similarity to copyin, and this is clearly a copy.
 
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ROFL, Israel pioneered the modern drones, it even sold it's drones to U.S.
Predator drone was designed by an Israeli
Iran wrote the book on using Drones in war. It was the first country that ever used drones for these purposes. It goes back to early 80s in Iran-Iraq war. This is from 1984 they used to fire RPG-7 bullets back then that were unguided.


As far as I'm concerned, any other country including Israel copied Iranian concepts.
 
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Iran wrote the book on using Drones in war. It was the first country that ever used drones for these purposes. It goes back to early 80s in Iran-Iraq war. This is from 1984 they used to fire RPG-7 bullets back then that were unguided.


As far as I'm concerned, any other country including Israel copied Iranian concepts.
Modern era[edit]
Battlefield UAVs[edit]
Main article: Battlefield UAV
See also: Battlefield UAVs in the United States
The attitude towards UAVs, which were often seen as unreliable and expensive toys, changed dramatically with the Israeli Air Force’s victory over the Syrian Air Force in 1982. Israel’s coordinated use of UAVs alongside manned aircraft, allowed the state to quickly destroy dozens of Syrian aircraft with minimal losses. Israeli drones were used as electronic decoys, electronic jammers as well as for real time video reconnaissance.[25]

The US military is entering a new era in which UAVs will be critical to SIGINT payloads, or Electronic countermeasures systems should be in widespread use following 2010, with the UAVs controlled and relaying data back over high-bandwidth data links in real time, linked to ground, air, sea, and space platforms. The trend had been emerging before the American war in Afghanistan began in 2001, but was greatly accelerated by the use of UAVs in that conflict. The Predator RQ-1L UAV (General Atomics) was the first deployed UAV to the Balkans in 1995 Iraq in 1996 and was proved very effective in Operation Iraqi Freedom as well as Afghanistan.

Israel believed to use armed drones for decades but never admited possesing them
 
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Modern era[edit]
Battlefield UAVs[edit]
Main article: Battlefield UAV
See also: Battlefield UAVs in the United States
The attitude towards UAVs, which were often seen as unreliable and expensive toys, changed dramatically with the Israeli Air Force’s victory over the Syrian Air Force in 1982. Israel’s coordinated use of UAVs alongside manned aircraft, allowed the state to quickly destroy dozens of Syrian aircraft with minimal losses. Israeli drones were used as electronic decoys, electronic jammers as well as for real time video reconnaissance.[25]

The US military is entering a new era in which UAVs will be critical to SIGINT payloads, or Electronic countermeasures systems should be in widespread use following 2010, with the UAVs controlled and relaying data back over high-bandwidth data links in real time, linked to ground, air, sea, and space platforms. The trend had been emerging before the American war in Afghanistan began in 2001, but was greatly accelerated by the use of UAVs in that conflict. The Predator RQ-1L UAV (General Atomics) was the first deployed UAV to the Balkans in 1995 Iraq in 1996 and was proved very effective in Operation Iraqi Freedom as well as Afghanistan.

Israel believed to use armed drones for decades but never admited possesing them
Iran was using Mohajer 1 for surveillance ever since 1981:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghods_Mohajer
 
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Do me a favour, there's a difference between a similarity to copyin, and this is clearly a copy.

What is the favour you wish me to do? Your sentence does not make sense.
However I understood what you tried to say and here is my answer. Stop being blind and ignorant.
 
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Iran was using Mohajer 1 for surveillance ever since 1981:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghods_Mohajer
The IAI Scout (known in Israel under its Hebrew name זהבן - "Oriole") is a reconnaissance unmanned air vehicle developed in Israel in the 1970s by Israel Aircraft Industries as a competitor to the Tadiran Mastiff. During the 1970s, the Israeli military was becoming increasingly interested in battlefield UAVs, and in response IAI management finally decided that they were interested in the concept as well. The Scout had a similar configuration as the Mastiff, with a pusher propeller and a twin-boom tail.

Use[edit]
In 1981, the Israeli IAI Scout drone, was first operated in combat missions by the South African Defence Force against Angola during Operation Protea.[1]

During the 1982 Lebanon War, the Israelis were confronted by Syrian surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), which were heavily sited in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. All 28 SAM sites in the Bekaa were destroyed, however, partly through the use of Sampson decoys to get them to reveal their presence, and partly through reconnaissance information obtained by the Mastiff and Scout UAVs.

Israeli battlefield UAVs had proven a great success, and soon came to the attention of the US military, particularly after the American intervention in Lebanon in 1983. This led to the US Navy's request for a battlefield UAV in 1984, and Tadiran and IAI decided, or were told to, join forces to submit a proposal for the American requirement. The result was an IAI division named "Mazlat", now "Malat".

The US military is reluctant to buy from foreign sources, so foreign companies always team up with an American company to invite sales. AAI had already worked with Tadiran to sell the Mastiff in the US, so AAI was a logical choice, and Mazlat and AAI developed the Pioneer, which won the competition. Since then, Malat has developed more advanced battlefield UAVs, and has collaborated on battlefield UAV developments with partners such as AAI.

After consolidating production of the Mastiff and Scout, the Malat company continued to sell them in slightly refined versions for over a decade. Both aircraft have fixed landing gear and are generally operated from runways, performing short landings using an arresting-wire hook, though they may be launched using a hydraulic catapult off the back of a truck, and recovered by a net. They both carry imaging sensors in a turret underneath the fuselage.

The Mastiff and Scout remained in service with the Israeli Army until the early 1990s, when they were replaced by the IAI Searcher.

Unlike iranians, We already developed our uav's earlier than the 80's and had OPERATIONAL uav's in the 80's, not prototypes.
300px-IAI-Scout-hatzerim-1.jpg


The IAI Searcher (also known by the Hebrew name מרומית Meyromit - "Marsh tern",[2] or officially in Israel as the חוגלה Hugla - "Alectoris") is a reconnaissance UAV developed in Israel in the 1980s. In the following decade, it replaced the IMI Mastiff and IAI Scout UAVs then in service with the Israeli Army.

The Searcher looks almost identical to the Scout and Pioneer, but is in fact scaled up and is well over twice the size of the Scout. The Searcher is powered by a 35 kW (47 hp) piston engine. The new design features updated avionics and sensor systems with greater flight endurance as well as increased redundancy for improved survivability. In addition to Israel, the system had been exported and is currently in use byIndia, South Korea, Singapore,[3]Thailand and Turkey.[4]
300px-IAI-Searcher1.jpg

What is the favour you wish me to do? Your sentence does not make sense.
However I understood what you tried to say and here is my answer. Stop being blind and ignorant.

However, baldly saying "Do me a favor" is often meant as sarcasm - for example "Do me a favor and shut up." That would be very rude. If you are seriously asking someone to do something for you, you usually soften it and ask more politely, for example, "Would you do me a favor, please, and hold the door while I carry these packages in?" It is generally phrased in such a way as to avoid the suggestion that you are ordering the person to do something nice for you. (If you are in a position to order them to do it, it really isn't a favor any more!)

https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20140109033823AAQb9BM
 
. .
The IAI Scout (known in Israel under its Hebrew name זהבן - "Oriole") is a reconnaissance unmanned air vehicle developed in Israel in the 1970s by Israel Aircraft Industries as a competitor to the Tadiran Mastiff. During the 1970s, the Israeli military was becoming increasingly interested in battlefield UAVs, and in response IAI management finally decided that they were interested in the concept as well. The Scout had a similar configuration as the Mastiff, with a pusher propeller and a twin-boom tail.

Use[edit]
In 1981, the Israeli IAI Scout drone, was first operated in combat missions by the South African Defence Force against Angola during Operation Protea.[1]

During the 1982 Lebanon War, the Israelis were confronted by Syrian surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), which were heavily sited in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. All 28 SAM sites in the Bekaa were destroyed, however, partly through the use of Sampson decoys to get them to reveal their presence, and partly through reconnaissance information obtained by the Mastiff and Scout UAVs.

Israeli battlefield UAVs had proven a great success, and soon came to the attention of the US military, particularly after the American intervention in Lebanon in 1983. This led to the US Navy's request for a battlefield UAV in 1984, and Tadiran and IAI decided, or were told to, join forces to submit a proposal for the American requirement. The result was an IAI division named "Mazlat", now "Malat".

The US military is reluctant to buy from foreign sources, so foreign companies always team up with an American company to invite sales. AAI had already worked with Tadiran to sell the Mastiff in the US, so AAI was a logical choice, and Mazlat and AAI developed the Pioneer, which won the competition. Since then, Malat has developed more advanced battlefield UAVs, and has collaborated on battlefield UAV developments with partners such as AAI.

After consolidating production of the Mastiff and Scout, the Malat company continued to sell them in slightly refined versions for over a decade. Both aircraft have fixed landing gear and are generally operated from runways, performing short landings using an arresting-wire hook, though they may be launched using a hydraulic catapult off the back of a truck, and recovered by a net. They both carry imaging sensors in a turret underneath the fuselage.

The Mastiff and Scout remained in service with the Israeli Army until the early 1990s, when they were replaced by the IAI Searcher.

Unlike iranians, We already developed our uav's earlier than the 80's and had OPERATIONAL uav's in the 80's, not prototypes.
300px-IAI-Scout-hatzerim-1.jpg


The IAI Searcher (also known by the Hebrew name מרומית Meyromit - "Marsh tern",[2] or officially in Israel as the חוגלה Hugla - "Alectoris") is a reconnaissance UAV developed in Israel in the 1980s. In the following decade, it replaced the IMI Mastiff and IAI Scout UAVs then in service with the Israeli Army.

The Searcher looks almost identical to the Scout and Pioneer, but is in fact scaled up and is well over twice the size of the Scout. The Searcher is powered by a 35 kW (47 hp) piston engine. The new design features updated avionics and sensor systems with greater flight endurance as well as increased redundancy for improved survivability. In addition to Israel, the system had been exported and is currently in use byIndia, South Korea, Singapore,[3]Thailand and Turkey.[4]
300px-IAI-Searcher1.jpg



However, baldly saying "Do me a favor" is often meant as sarcasm - for example "Do me a favor and shut up." That would be very rude. If you are seriously asking someone to do something for you, you usually soften it and ask more politely, for example, "Would you do me a favor, please, and hold the door while I carry these packages in?" It is generally phrased in such a way as to avoid the suggestion that you are ordering the person to do something nice for you. (If you are in a position to order them to do it, it really isn't a favor any more!)

https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20140109033823AAQb9BM
You are trying too hard body. Drones are being used ever since WWII as decoys or for targeting practice.

Iran had the capacity to produce drones before Iran-Iraq war as well. However, the first time a nation put the drone into real use (i.e. what modern UAVs are used these days for) in a war was in 1981 and that was by Iran. The first nation who ever used an armed drone in real war again was Iran. All of this is documented in the Wikipedia link I mentioned above:

Mohajer was first developed at the peak of the Iran–Iraq War. Studies started between 1980 by Iranian universities and IRGC as Iran needed surveillance equipment to gather information about Iraqi moves. Four prototypes were built in 1981 and were initially put into service to monitor the enemy lines in Shalamche. This drone which was later named Mohajer-1 was Iran's first step to manufacture UAVs. Mohajer continued to photograph Iraqi lines to the end of the war and accomplished 619 sorties at the end.[5] There are reports indicating that Mohajer-1 was armed with six RPG-7 rockets to attack enemy positions, making it the first UCAV in the world to be used in war.[6][7]

End of story.
 
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You are trying too hard body. Drones are being used ever since WWII as decoys or for targeting practice.

Iran had the capacity to produce drones before Iran-Iraq war as well. However, the first time a nation put the drone into real use (i.e. what modern UAVs are used these days for) in a war was in 1981 and that was by Iran. The first nation who ever used an armed drone in real war again was Iran. All of this is documented in the Wikipedia link I mentioned above:

Mohajer was first developed at the peak of the Iran–Iraq War. Studies started between 1980 by Iranian universities and IRGC as Iran needed surveillance equipment to gather information about Iraqi moves. Four prototypes were built in 1981 and were initially put into service to monitor the enemy lines in Shalamche. This drone which was later named Mohajer-1 was Iran's first step to manufacture UAVs. Mohajer continued to photograph Iraqi lines to the end of the war and accomplished 619 sorties at the end.[5] There are reports indicating that Mohajer-1 was armed with six RPG-7 rockets to attack enemy positions, making it the first UCAV in the world to be used in war.[6][7]

End of story.

Velesh kon, bezar fekr kone unha avalin kashayi budan ke uav estafadeh kardan. Chize mohemi nist ke.
Mohem ine ke dare misuze as khoshgelie fotros :D
 
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You are trying too hard body. Drones are being used ever since WWII as decoys or for targeting practice.

Iran had the capacity to produce drones before Iran-Iraq war as well. However, the first time a nation put the drone into real use (i.e. what modern UAVs are used these days for) in a war was in 1981 and that was by Iran. The first nation who ever used an armed drone in real war again was Iran. All of this is documented in the Wikipedia link I mentioned above:

Mohajer was first developed at the peak of the Iran–Iraq War. Studies started between 1980 by Iranian universities and IRGC as Iran needed surveillance equipment to gather information about Iraqi moves. Four prototypes were built in 1981 and were initially put into service to monitor the enemy lines in Shalamche. This drone which was later named Mohajer-1 was Iran's first step to manufacture UAVs. Mohajer continued to photograph Iraqi lines to the end of the war and accomplished 619 sorties at the end.[5] There are reports indicating that Mohajer-1 was armed with six RPG-7 rockets to attack enemy positions, making it the first UCAV in the world to be used in war.[6][7]

End of story.
if u don't know the difference between the world war drones to modern drones which pioneered by ISRAEL then I got nothing else to comment about.
So u took the technology which Israel invented and putted some unguided missile upon it, wow!
 
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if u don't know the difference between the world war drones to modern drones which pioneered by ISRAEL then I got nothing else to comment about.
So u took the technology which Israel invented and putted some unguided missile upon it, wow!

Ok dude we got it, you even did invent Pizza, thanks for your valuable contributions.
 
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