China tests hybrid engine aimed at stealthier combat drones
China has successfully conducted flight tests of a hybrid propulsion system designed to make small combat drones quieter, harder to detect and capable of flying longer distances, according to a report aired Friday by CCTV‑7, the country’s military television channel. The system, rated at 60 kilowatts and tested in December, combines fuel‑based propulsion with electric drive to tackle a long‑standing trade‑off in drone design. Larger fuel‑powered unmanned aircraft offer strong performance and range but produce significant noise and heat; smaller battery‑powered drones are more discreet but limited by short flight endurance.
The hybrid group generates electricity from fuel in flight, then lets the drone switch to silent electric mode when stealth is required, the South China Morning Post says, citing the CCTV‑7 broadcast. This dual‑mode capability would allow small drones to cover greater distances while maintaining low noise levels and reduced thermal signatures, qualities that could make them harder to detect and intercept on the battlefield. The system is developed by Sichuan Tianfu Light Power Technology, a state‑backed firm that also revealed the hybrid engine alongside two turbojets at a low‑altitude‑economy industry conference in late 2024. The company, operating under the Aero Engine Corporation of China, is working to commercialize the hybrid setup and a larger 600‑kilogram‑force turbojet.
This propulsion test is part of a broader Chinese push to expand unmanned aerial capabilities. In February, China flew the CH‑YH1000S, billed as the world’s first hybrid cargo drone, in Chongqing through a partnership between the aerospace sector and the country’s electric‑vehicle industry. In December, the long‑range stealth drone CH‑7 made its maiden flight. By late March, state media had broadcast a live demonstration of the Atlas drone‑swarm system, which enables a single operator to control up to 96 coordinated drones via an AI‑driven kill chain.
At the same time, a Mitchell Institute report issued this week indicates Beijing has parked more than 200 obsolete J‑6 fighter jets, converted into attack drones, at six air bases near the Taiwan Strait. Analysts say these converted aircraft would act like cruise missiles in the opening phase of any conflict with Taiwan, aiming to overwhelm air defenses by forcing expensive interceptors to engage cheap, disposable targets.
The hybrid‑engine advance fills a specific gap: giving small tactical drones the range of fuel‑powered systems without losing the stealth benefits of electric flight. As drone warfare shifts toward autonomous swarms and attrition‑based strategies, the ability to operate quietly and evade infrared detection could prove decisive in contested airspace.
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