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YEAR IN REVIEW: A.F.Theriault & Son Ltd.'s drones helping to train against terrorism



YEAR IN REVIEW: A.F.Theriault & Son Ltd.'s drones helping to train against terrorism

YEAR IN REVIEW: A.F.Theriault & Son Ltd.'s drones helping to train against terrorism

Published on December 27th, 2008
Published on January 30th, 2010
 

Boat building sending out shipment of drones on Friday

As the year 2008 draws to a close, the Sou'Wester and NovaNewsNow.com take a look back at some of the events and news from the past year.

Topics :
NATO , U.S. Navy , Meggitt Training Systems , Meteghan River , Digby County , Aden

By Carla Allen

FOR THE SOU'WESTER

NovaNewsNow.com (STORY ORIGINALLY POSTED APRIL 23, 2008) A boatbuilder in Meteghan River, Digby County, N.S. is proud of their role in helping to prevent terrorism by building expendable targets.

A.F.Theriault & Son Ltd.’s Hammerhead production stands a good chance of seeing repeat business: the fleet of target drones is being built to be blown up to train artillery.

Project manager David Saulnier says the exercises have become a post USS Cole mandate. “All NATO friendly countries are being encouraged to train against the threat of terrorism,” he said.

The USS Cole event was a suicide bombing attack in October 2000 against the U.S. Navy guided missile destroyer while it was harboured in the Yemeni port of Aden. Seventeen sailors were killed.

This Friday, A.F.Theriault is shipping six

units to its partner in the project, Meggitt Training Systems in Medicine Hat, which installs the electronics and runs the boats for the navies that buy them. Canada and Germany have bought the 22 built to date.

Meggitt saw the Mongoose patrol boat, a high-speed attack craft built by the boat shop in 2005/06, and thought it would be a good platform from which to develop the unmanned drone.

The 17-foot boats, which Saulnier refers to as “basically being like a big jet ski”, are constructed of fiberglass with ceramic reinforcements in strategic areas of the hull. “It takes a lot of pounding,” said Saulnier.

Although he won’t supply a unit price, he did say that the drones are probably the lowest cost drone in the world. “It’s very competitive in the market as unmanned drones go, especially for target practice,” he said.

The boats have a beam of four-and-a-half-feet, a 135-hp Mercury inboard engine and are rated at 30 knots in sea state three.

Although the boat is used in military operations, it is not a weapon-carrying vessel and there is no surveillance equipment of any kind on board. It’s strictly a target boat for training.

Saulnier says they expect more orders. “It’s basically just catching on in the global waterfront now,” he said.

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