You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Down Under
DIY cruise missile attracts defence offers
2003-12-06
A New Zealand engineer who made world headlines with his home-built cruise missile says he has received "very serious" offers from an Iranian company to invest in the project. Bruce Simpson said the firm was linked to the aerospace and missile industries and was one of a number of inquiries from several countries including Pakistan, China and Lebanon. After "worrying about the bigger picture" and turning down the offers, the cash-strapped engineer found himself bankrupted by the Inland Revenue Department for non-payment of taxes.

The Iranians made "very serious inquiries about investing in the development of the X-jet technology," Mr Simpson said on his website, aardvark.co.nz. "I have since had emails from Pakistan, Lebanon, China and other countries, all of which sought to obtain details of the X-jet project and some of which have involved seemingly genuine offers of not insignificant payment for such information."

Mr Simpson said he contacted the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service who advised it was "certainly not sensible" to export such technology. Instead he signed a heads of agreement with a United States firm that would have set up a research and development plant in Waikato. The deal was scuttled last Monday when he was bankrupted. A bitter Mr Simpson says Inland Revenue was stupid to quash a deal that would have reaped cash "hundreds of times the value of the outstanding debt".

The 49-year-old engineer, website developer and software technician worked within a budget of $US5,000 to build his do-it-yourself cruise missile. The X-Jet is similar to the pulse-jets that powered Germany’s V-1 missiles in World War Two and the GPS guided missile has a range of 160 kilometres, with a 10-kilogram warhead. Mr Simpson said he acquired most of the parts from the online auction house eBay, including a GPS system purchased for $US120 that "was delivered by international airmail in less than a week and passed through customs without any problems". The missile was no longer in his possession and its whereabouts would be kept secret "until an appropriate time", he said.
BTW, any Rantburgers who feel like building their own cruise missile can purchase plans through Mr. Simpson’s website aardvark.com.nz
Posted by:phil_b

#7  Couple months ago there was a story about how this british RC club had just flown a robot model aircraft across the Atlantic totally under it's own control. GPS and a mini computer. They only used their remote for takeoff and landing. All you have to do is scale it up.
Posted by: Steve   2003-12-6 9:28:39 PM  

#6  Frank: a single board computer ($100 or so OTS) will work even better.
Posted by: mojo   2003-12-6 8:41:44 PM  

#5  remember - terror weapons dont have to be particularly militarily effective, they just have to scare the hell out of people. The jihadi designed - donkey deployed missle systems demostrate that design methodology.

As far as gyros go, the germans built versions of this sort of thing using 1940's pre-silicon age technology, Im sure there are all sorts of things today that could provide gyroscopic feedback to a system via a generic computer interface, which would then control the servo controls.

The Jihadis would never go for a solution like this, its much easier to get some hopped up pimply faced, 15 year old beat-off artist to simply drive a truck full of explosives to the local mall. Weapons systems innovation is not their forte, killing innocent women and children with weakminded pubescant males as weapons guidance systems and bulk explosives is their style.

Posted by: frank martin   2003-12-6 3:15:26 PM  

#4  Well, it's a bit more complicated that that to put together a missile with any accuracy at all.

GPS is only one part of the guidance system. What I am used to seeing called the Inertial Guidance System is based on gyroscopes used to detect yaw and pitch.

The basic principles behind the filtering algorithms which smooth and interpolate the readings from the gyros (usually plural) and the location device (in this case the GPS receiver tuned to the commercial band, non-corrected band) are well known, but accuracy with them is a fine art. Been there, been involved in doing that.

Of course, if all you want is to fly a model aircraft a mile or so and hit anything in the vague vicinity, then that's another matter. But I rather suspect you'd best use that radio controlled model airplane + laptop + GPS in calm weather .... ;-)
Posted by: rkb   2003-12-6 2:05:51 PM  

#3  So you're telling me that when I go, it could be at the hands of a toy airplane cobbled together by jihadis and controlled by a PDA and Legos...

I'm so... not comforted.
Posted by: Fred   2003-12-6 1:57:35 PM  

#2  Anybody who goes into the average Hobby store in the country has most of the workings of cruise missle. Your average R/C enthusiast can hobble together enough technology to allow an aircraft to fly unassisted to a predetermined target.

recipe for cruise missle:

1 - off the shelf large scale R/C aircraft
1 - GPS with computer interface connection
1 - small lightwieght computer ( older off the shelf laptop will work nicely.
1- GPS maplink software
1 - custom made laptop to servo interface. ( the tricky part)

Assemble parts - test the system.
Adjust scale of aircraft to accomodate payload.

Most GPS will report speed and altitude accurate enough to provide a rudimentary " Internal Navigation System' to the R/C aircraft.

The only tricky part is writing software to interpret changes in direction requested by the "INS" into servo movements to the controls of the aircraft. There are serveral prototypes that could be used that are off the shelf. Lego mindstorms provides a compact simple to use and easy to interaface module to allow control of "servos" with computer driven commands. You probably wouldnt use it in the final model, but as an example of how the whole system would fit together, it would provide a pretty good baseline.
Posted by: frank martin   2003-12-6 1:25:40 PM  

#1  Purchase plans? Great, now everyone will have cruise missles. And cheaper than ours!
Posted by: Charles   2003-12-6 11:40:28 AM  

00:00