Carl Johnson, Northrop
Grumman: X-47B UCAS First Cruise Flight
December 2, 2011
Northrop Grumman and the U.S. Navy will be able to increase the pace and
productivity of the X-47B flight test program following the successful
first flight Nov. 22 of the second air vehicle developed for the Navy's
Unmanned Combat Air System Carrier Demonstration (UCAS-D) program.
The
X-47B flew its first flight in "cruise" configuration (landing gear up)
on Sept. 30, marking an important milestone in its flight test program.
The tailless, autonomous aircraft known as Air Vehicle 2 (AV-2) took off
under hazy skies from Edwards Air Force Base at 12:43 p.m. PST, climbed
rapidly to an altitude of 5,000 feet, flew several racetrack patterns
over Rogers Dry Lake, then landed safely at 1:12 p.m.
"The successful addition of AV-2 to the fleet of X-47B test aircraft
provides a critical inflection point for the UCAS-D program," said Carl
Johnson, vice president and UCAS-D program manager for Northrop
Grumman's Aerospace Systems sector. "With two aircraft now available, we
can increase the amount of aircraft performance data we gather, which
will allow us to meet our required aircraft capability demonstration
goals in a timely manner."
The availability of two test aircraft is particularly important, added
Johnson, for helping the program maintain a satisfactory flight test
rhythm as it begins transitioning X-47B aircraft to Naval Air Station
Patuxent River, Md., (Pax River) for shore-based carrier suitability
testing. While one aircraft is being moved to Pax River – expected to
occur by the end of 2011 – the other one will continue envelope
expansion flight testing at Edwards.
The
testing at Pax River is scheduled to begin in early 2012. It will
include testing the X-47B's ability to conduct precision approaches to
the carrier, and to perform arrested landings and "roll-out" catapult
launches at land-based test facilities. The testing will also include
flight testing precision navigation computers and new guidance,
navigation and control software recently installed on both aircraft. The
new suite of hardware and software will enable the X-47B to make
precision landings on a moving carrier deck.
The X-47B is a computer-controlled unmanned aircraft system that takes
off, flies a preprogrammed mission, and then returns to base – all in
response to mouse clicks from a mission operator. The operator actively
monitors the X-47B air vehicle's operation using simple situational
awareness displays, but does not fly it via remote control, as some
unmanned systems are operated.
The Navy awarded the UCAS-D prime contract to Northrop Grumman in August
2007. The contract calls for the development and flight testing of two
strike-fighter-sized X-47B unmanned aircraft. In 2013, the program is
scheduled to demonstrate the first carrier launches and recoveries by a
tailless, unmanned, low-observable-relevant aircraft. Autonomous aerial
refueling demonstrations are planned for 2014.