Technology
British navy defense secretary discusses jet pack suit to attack ships
With near-peer adversaries racing to stand atop a militarized technological capability mountain, the Royal Navy is looking to one enhancement in particular to give them somewhat of an edge: jet packs.
While making an announcement in Portsmouth, England, concerning increases in defense spending, Britain’s Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson witnessed a demonstration by a private tech company, Gravity, of a new jet-powered suit capable of sending its occupant up to 10,000 feet into the air.
The entire suit, which has drawn comparisons to the ever-popular ensemble developed by Marvel’s Tony Stark, is estimated to cost £340,000, or about $450,000 USD, according to The Telegraph.
Talking with Gravity’s test pilot following the demonstration, an exuberant Williamson floated a specific scenario he envisioned in which the suit would provide a significant edge.
“Can you just imagine doing an assault on to a ship?” he asked the pilot, according to the Telegraph report.
“A ship you need to regain control of?” a Gravity representative chimed in. “You can have 10 people in different places all at once and the first thing they’ll know is when they hear a faint jet noise.”
“You are really able to do a much more discrete insertion,” Williams added.
Despite the defence minister’s enthusiasm following the exhibition, such a suit is nowhere near ready for use in combat.
A number of “Iron Man” suit concepts have been introduced over the last five years, but as of February, a distant exoskeleton cousin to Tony Stark’s variant — developed by US Special Operations Command — may be as close as current manufacturing can get.
“It’s not the ‘Iron Man.’ I’ll be the first person to tell you that,” SOCOM Acquisition Executive James Smith said about the exoskeleton — known as the Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit — in February.
“When we get the exoskeleton here in a few months, we will have the best exoskeleton in the Department of Defense,” he added, before cautioning, “It will not be something our operators will feel comfortable putting on a close [combat] environment today. So, moving, shooting, communicating in the face of enemy fire — not quite there yet.”
The tech may indeed be insufficient, but with developments on display like in England this week, progress toward a super suit is evident.
“We’re not going to stop looking for better body armor, better situation awareness, better lethality,” Smith said.
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