UK Royal Air Force Expands Protector Drone Fleet: Reaching Nearly 50% Strength by End of 2024 – SOFREP News Team

The UK Royal Air Force’s RG Mk1 Protector drone fleet will reach nearly 50% of its planned strength by the end of 2024.

This progress comes with the recent arrival and assembly of the second aircraft in the UK, which will soon be followed by the delivery of five additional airframes.

According to a 22 July release from the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD), engineers from 31 Squadron RAF have completed the build and initial testing of this second aircraft. Further tests and evaluations are scheduled over the coming months.

Transition from Reaper to Protector

The RAF, in collaboration with Defence Equipment & Support (DE&S), expects to receive five more aircraft by the end of 2024. This influx of drones will pave the way for establishing aircrew and technician training in the UK.

Protector aircraft PR009 and PR010 side by side outside 31 Squadron at Royal Air Force Waddington on the 19 July 2024. (Credit: UK MoD / Crown copyright / DVIDS)

The RG Mk1 Protector drones, UK variants of the MQ-9B SkyGuardian developed by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI), will gradually take over operations from the MQ-9A Reaper fleet in 2025. Unlike their predecessors, these drones are transported to the UK and assembled locally, rather than flying over from the GA-ASI manufacturing sites in the US.

Fleet Expansion and Training

The MoD has stated that this delivery marks a busy period for the Protector program. Initial flight testing with the first aircraft was conducted in November 2023. Training initially took place at GA-ASI’s facilities in the US, using three RAF-owned RPAS.

The Protector Technician Course began in February 2024, and the first Protector crews graduated from the Operational Conversion Unit (OCU) in April.

Training will transition to the UK later this year, utilizing newly completed infrastructure at RAF Waddington, the home base for the Protector fleet. An international MQ-9B symposium was hosted by the RAF at RAF Cranwell in April, highlighting the growing importance of these drones.