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Tue, Oct 11, 2011

Fury 1500 UAS Achieves 14-Hour Duration Flight

Advanced Version Of The Fury Breaks 100 Total Hours; Continues Progress Toward Deployment-Ready Status

Development of a new, long-endurance UAS reached another milestone Thursday, as the Fury 1500 Special Mission Unmanned Aerial System achieved a flight lasting over 14 hours. This new version of the Fury was developed by AME Unmanned Air Systems (AME UAS) in San Luis Obispo, CA.

Fury 1500 testing addresses multiple Warfighter requirements. Designed for a broad range of missions and long endurance, Fury 1500's large payload volume and power capacity can support several payloads simultaneously and provide for a flexible, multi-mission capability. AME recently moved to a more powerful launcher to eliminate wind and altitude launch constraints when flying above 300lbs at takeoff.

"The Fury 1500 continues its recent string of successful test flights over the last few weeks. We have been demonstrating system reliability by flying back-to-back sorties and have accumulated over 109 flight hours in the last 45 days. Reaching this duration puts us alone in the category of long-endurance, large payload, tactical UAS, but we are not finished yet. We expect to achieve 16+ hours soon, and in a short time will exceed that as well as we continue to improve our heavy-fuel propulsion system," said John Purvis, President and CEO of AME UAS. "Our recent successes over multiple 12+ hour flights serve as a testament to the hard work and talent of our team."

The Fury 1500's first flight was in November 2010. AME UAS says the 14.2-hour flight solidifies the Fury's position as the longest-endurance and largest payload tactical and runway-independent UAS flying today.

"Fury 1500, and its mission planning and control system, Sharkfin, are progressing nicely toward a fully deployable capability for our Army, Navy, and special mission customers," said Jay McConville, AME UAS' Chairman. "With its multi-INT capability, small footprint, and open architecture, we expect Fury to add significantly to our nation's mission capability for both land and maritime use, and be easily integrated with existing C2 and intelligence systems."

www.ameuas.com

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