Last News of Technology and Science > CV-22 Osprey
» Special Forces get the first CV-22 Ospreys
( November 2006 )
The United States Special
Forces have been the best equipped in the world for a long time,
though the gap widened considerably on Thursday with the first
delivery of the CV-22 Osprey to the U.S. Air Force Special
Operations Command at Hurlburt Field, Florida. The CV-22 is the
Air Force version of the V-22 Osprey, a tiltrotor aircraft that
combines the speed and range of fixed wing aircraft with the
vertical flight performance of a helicopter. With its engine
nacelles and rotors in vertical position, it can take off, land
and hover like a helicopter, but once airborne its engine
nacelles can be rotated to convert the aircraft to a turboprop
airplane capable of high-speed, high-altitude flight. The CV-22
offers unprecedented speed in the ingress and extraction of
special forces into any terrain.

Bell-Boeing will provide performance-based support for the first
nine production CV-22s for aircraft maintenance, reliability,
supply and repairs, technical data and interactive electronic
technical manuals, engineering, information technology, field
service and logistics support. Five of the nine aircraft will be
assigned to the 8th Special Operations Squadron at Hurlburt
Field, and the remaining four already are assigned to the 71st
Special Operations Squadron at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M.
The CV-22 was jointly designed, produced and supported by Bell
Helicopter Textron and Boeing Integrated Defense Systems.
Just in case the advantages of the CV-22 and its almost
identical brethren the V-22 aren’t entirely obvious, the
following recently published briefing by Loren Thompson of the
Lexington Institute highlights why the Osprey is one system the
military needs more of right now:
The Bush Administration is projecting that defense spending will
fall from four percent of the economy today to three percent at
the beginning of the next decade. In the past, such declines
have hit procurement accounts harder than other types of
spending, because it is easier to delay new weapons than it is
to cut military pay, healthcare benefits and operational
outlays. The services have already begun trimming their weapons
programs. For example, the Air Force wants to end production of
the C-17, its only modern jet airlifter, while the Navy and
Marine Corps have proposed deleting 169 planes from their
2008-2013 spending plans.
Against this backdrop, critics are complaining that some of the
weapons being developed by the services don't seem to have much
to do with winning the global war on terrorism. Programs like
the Joint Strike Fighter and the Navy's next-generation
destroyer may be needed to counter future conventional threats,
the critics say, but right now all the threats seem to be
unconventional -- terrorists, insurgents, weapons traffickers
and so on. The critics have a point, especially given how poorly
the fight seems to be going in Iraq and Afghanistan.
However, there is at least one new military system about to
enter the force that is relevant right now, and badly needed in
places like Iraq. That is the Marine Corps' V-22 Osprey, the
world's first operational tilt-rotor aircraft. A tilt-rotor
combines the vertical agility of helicopters with the speed and
range of fixed-wing planes, providing unique versatility. It not
only can land anywhere -- on mountains, in jungles, on
storm-tossed ships -- but it can get to such places even when
they are far, far away, because the Osprey has a range of over a
thousand miles. In other words, you can fly a V-22 from
Washington to New Orleans without stopping for fuel, not a
mission you'd want to attempt with a regular helicopter. A
fixed-wing airplane can make that trip also, but if the runways
in the Big Easy are flooded, it can't land. A V-22 can make the
trip and land, wherever there is a dry spot of ground.
It doesn't require a degree from Professor Rumsfeld's School for
the Truly Transformational to figure out that this a special
capability, one well-suited to a world of irregular warfare,
unconventional threats, and homeland disasters. In fact, the
Marine Corps figured it out a generation ago, and has stuck with
the Osprey through a rocky development effort reminiscent of the
trials faced a generation earlier by the helicopters it will
replace. But the Osprey was vindicated last year in a very
successful operational evaluation, and it will be deployed to
Iraq next year. The Marine Corps plans to produce 21 V-22's in
2008 and 30 per year in each of the following five years. A
gee-whiz special-operations version for the Air Force will be
fielded in 2009.
As the Osprey enters the force in the years ahead, planners in
the Army and other services are going to be kicking themselves
that they didn't invest more in tilt-rotors. Why buy
conventional twin-engine turboprops to carry cargo to remote
bases when you can carry three tons of supplies 500 miles, and
not even need a runway once you arrive? Why struggle to trade
off the advantages of a helicopter versus an airplane in
conducting difficult combat missions when a single airframe
combines the best qualities of both? In the fight for relevance
the V-22 is a clear winner, and the only question is why it took
so long for some experts to figure that out.
Link: CV-22
Source: gizmag
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