Twitter Facebook Google RSS
 
National Defense > Blog > Posts > Navy Carrier Drone Not Immune to Budget Worries
Navy Carrier Drone Not Immune to Budget Worries
By Eric Beidel



NAVAL AIR STATION PATUXENT RIVER, Md. — The technical challenges of building a combat drone that can land and take off from a Navy aircraft carrier might not be nearly as tough as ensuring the aircraft survives the current budget climate.
 
Navy officials said that technological issues have been the least of their worries for the Unmanned Combat Air System program that seeks to produce autonomous drones that can land on and take off from carriers.
 
The largest shadows have been cast by fiscal uncertainty and limited access to carriers for testing, Program Manager Capt. Jaime W. Engdahl said July 31 as reporters were given a first glimpse at one of the two stealth drones built by Northrop Grumman.
 
Engdahl said he is confident that the "precision GPS technology is there." But he cautioned that other obstacles lie head. "The most difficult part of this program is keeping everything moving and continuing to execute in this budget environment and with the carrier constraints.”
 
Despite these concerns, officials here are pushing ahead with plans to perform sea trials with the X-47B demonstrators next year whenever a carrier becomes available.
 
The program's funding so far is $875 million, with expenditures of $143 million and $41 million carved out for fiscal year 2013 and 2014, respectively. Officials are operating under the expectation that the money will continue to be there, said Rear Adm. Mat Winter, who is a little more than a week into his role as program executive officer for unmanned systems and strike weapons. Leaders generally have been trying to protect unmanned aircraft from budget  cuts, he said.
 
The Navy began investigating the possibility of flying drones off carriers about 10 years ago, Engdahl said.
 
Flight tests already have been conducted at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The second of the two bat-winged jets recently arrived on the East Coast for further testing, causing some motorists to claim they had seen a UFO being transported on the Beltway.
 
Its first flight here on July 29 consisted of 35 minutes doing racetrack patterns over the Chesapeake Bay. The aircraft reached an altitude of 7,500 feet and a speed of 180 knots, Northrop Grumman officials said.
 
The drones were brought here to take advantage of 52,000 square miles of test range located off the coast. It also is one of only two places where the Navy works on catapult systems that launch aircraft from carriers and arresting gear that slows them down when they land.
 
A facility on base h
ere has been built to replicate the control systems on a carrier. Engineers began assembling the center in 2007, Cmdr. Jeff Dodge said.
 
“What we had to do to get an unmanned aircraft to operate [on a carrier] is take the entire aircraft carrier and digitize it,” he said.
 
A controller worn on the arm will help crew members move the drone about the carrier after it lands. Another handheld device allows a sailor to push a button that tells the aircraft to “wave off” a landing at the last minute if things don’t look right. In the mock control center, screens mimic what operators would see out the windows of the ship. Digital representations of X-47Bs can be seen circling around the deck to come in for a landing. A monitor displays different commands, including the wave off. Another calls for a “magic carpet” landing.
 
The goal is to work out all of the kinks as expeditiously as possible, officials said. Already, certain tasks have been completed in less than half the planned testing time, they said.
 
“We’re not waiting for this aircraft to deploy,” said Rear Adm. Randolph Mahr, assistant commander for research and engineering at Naval Air Systems Command.

Flight tests have validated the X-47B’s aerodynamic and propulsion performance and its ability to respond to commands from onboard guidance, navigation and control software.
 
“When it gets airborne, the aircraft does exactly what it says,” Engdahl said. “If things happen to the air vehicle then the air vehicle has the smarts to react specifically to that condition.”
 
Still, officials aren’t yet experimenting with weapons or sensors on the drones. They are focusing solely on what it takes to get the autonomous aircraft to land on, take off from and move about a carrier.
 
The Navy has a slight reference point given that it has operated unmanned Fire Scout rotorcraft off frigates, Winter said, though he acknowledged the difference in scale between the two operations. The X-47B is 38 feet long and has a wingspan of 62 feet. It has no tail and folding wings but weighs 44,500 pounds. A Fire Scout weighs about 3,000 pounds.
 
The Navy wants to have unmanned aircraft operating aboard carriers by the 2018-2020 timeframe, Winter said.
 
The Navy eventually will release a request for bids on an Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) program. For now, though, Winter declined to discuss details of that effort.

Comments

There are no comments yet for this post.
Items on this list require content approval. Your submission will not appear in public views until approved by someone with proper rights. More information on content approval.

Name: *

eMail *

Comment *

Title

Attachments

Name: *


eMail *


Comment *


 

Refresh
Please enter the text displayed in the image.
The picture contains 6 characters.

Characters *

  

Legal Notice *

NDIA is not responsible for screening, policing, editing, or monitoring your or another user's postings and encourages all of its users to use reasonable discretion and caution in evaluating or reviewing any posting. Moreover, and except as provided below with respect to NDIA's right and ability to delete or remove a posting (or any part thereof), NDIA does not endorse, oppose, or edit any opinion or information provided by you or another user and does not make any representation with respect to, nor does it endorse the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or reliability of any advice, opinion, statement, or other material displayed, uploaded, or distributed by you or any other user. Nevertheless, NDIA reserves the right to delete or take other action with respect to postings (or parts thereof) that NDIA believes in good faith violate this Legal Notice and/or are potentially harmful or unlawful. If you violate this Legal Notice, NDIA may, in its sole discretion, delete the unacceptable content from your posting, remove or delete the posting in its entirety, issue you a warning, and/or terminate your use of the NDIA site. Moreover, it is a policy of NDIA to take appropriate actions under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and other applicable intellectual property laws. If you become aware of postings that violate these rules regarding acceptable behavior or content, you may contact NDIA at 703.522.1820.

 

 

Bookmark and Share