


In response, the team developed the Dynamic Unmanned Threat Emitter (or DUMTE, for short), which Coyle said “uses a software-defined radio to digitally recreate radar waveforms” and lets Airmen “manipulate the signal and change the threat within seconds.” “This condition is insufficient for preparing our next generation of pilots for conventional warfare in a peer-to-peer or near-peer threat domains.” Goldwater Range, though threat resources are available, they are limited in number and lack fidelity, having a negative effect on the quality of F-35 pilot training,” a video about the innovation that was posted to AFWERX’s YouTube page said of the range, which serves personnel from Luke and Davis-Monthan Air Force bases, the Tuscon Air National Guard Base, and the U.S. David Coyle from Luke Air Force Base, Ariz., joined forces with Wylie Standage-Beier, a doctoral candidate in electrical engineering at Arizona State University, to develop an affordable solution for the limited and lackluster threat resources available to F-35 pilot trainees who use the Barry M.

56th Fighter Wing intelligence officers 1st Lt.
