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Sikorsky turns the venerable Black Hawk into a true unmanned aircraft

Sikorsky developed the unmanned Black Hawk in under a year to support combat and logistics with versatile payload options, showcasing autonomous flight at the AUSA conference.

  • On October 13, Sikorsky unveiled the S-70 UAS, nicknamed the U-Hawk, at the Association of the United States Army exposition in Washington, D.C., converting an ex-U.S. Army UH-60L into a fully uncrewed prototype in under a year.
  • Sikorsky pursued the U-Hawk after program losses and canceled Army efforts, accelerating it after losing the Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft competition to Textron’s Bell and the Army canceled the Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft program last year.
  • By removing the cockpit, Sikorsky redesigned the Black Hawk to add cargo capacity and a drive-on ramp, increasing internal volume by over 20% and carrying up to four Joint Modular Intermodal Containers.
  • A tablet gives an operator full command of the U-Hawk, enabling autonomous missions via the MATRIX autonomy suite with a tablet-operated minimally trained operator; the aircraft can self-deploy 1,600 nautical miles and endurance 14 hours, with first flight next year.
  • The move positions the U-Hawk as a flexible logistics and combat-support platform, leveraging UH-60 commonality to reduce costs and support missions through at least 2070.
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Sikersky presented the air system without a S70 pilot, also called UHawk, which completely removes the pilot from an old helicopter Black Hawk UH-60L and effectively transforms the helicopter into a large-scale drone. American company announced March...

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At AUSA 2025, Sikorsky unveiled the S-70UAS U-Hawk. It is an unmanned version of the UH-60L Black Hawk. Powered by the MATRIX system, it performs logistics, surveillance, and drone missions. The cockpit has been removed, increasing space by 25%. It can fly for 14 hours. First flight in 2026. It will save lives.

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Defense News broke the news in United States on Monday, October 13, 2025.
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