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THE 456th FIGHTER INTERCEPTOR SQUADRON |
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The Boeing X-50 |
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May 2002
Another one for the X files
The Boeing Canard Rotor/Wing demonstrator officially becomes X-50A
BY ERIK SIMONSEN
It's intended to float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
Click on Picture to enlarge
And now the Carnard Rotor/Wing, or CRW, demonstrator - the revolutionary concept that combines the capabilities of a helicopter with those of a fixed-wing jet aircraft - joins a rich heritage of experimental champions that have fostered tremendous advances in aerospace.
The CRW, being developed by Boeing and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, has been assigned an official designation of X-50A.
The aircraft combines the vertical takeoff/landing capabilities of a rotorcraft with the high-subsonic cruise speed and agility of a fixed-wing airplane. As its name implies, its versatility is achieved by having a specially designed rotor for vertical takeoffs and landings that can be stopped in flight to serve as a fixed wing for jet cruise. Under an agreement with DARPA, Boeing Phantom Works has built and will flight-test two pilotless demonstrators to assess and validate the advanced rotorcraft concept.
Follow-on CRW versions could evolve into larger, piloted vehicles capable of conducting specialized missions, including reconnaissance, armed escort, urban operations, tactical air support, communications/data relay and resupply. With such flexibility, operations could originate from small-deck ships or forward bases.
"We're proud to add the X-50A designation to the CRW and our long history of experimental vehicle development at Boeing," said George Muellner, president of Boeing Phantom Works, which originally conceived the CRW and produced two prototype demonstrators. "The X-50A is another example of the kind of innovative, affordable solution that we provide to meet the future needs of our customers."
Steve Bass, X-50 program manager, said the concept is moving closer to reality and that rigorous testing is already under way.
"At our Phantom Works facility in Mesa, Ariz., Ship No. 1 is currently undergoing testing in the hover pit, and Ship No. 2 is nearly completed," said Bass. "This momentum places us on track for a first flight of the X-50A later this year."
Also known as "Dragonfly," the unmanned X-50A CRW has a length of 17.7 feet and is 6.5 feet high. The rotor blades have a diameter of 12 feet. Powered by a conventional turbofan engine, the X- 50A will utilize diverter valves to direct thrust to the rotor blade tips (for helicopter mode), or aft to the jet nozzle (for fixed wing mode). Dual bleed thrust will be used during transition.
By directing thrust through the rotor tips, the CRW concept eliminates the need for a heavy and complex mechanical drive train, transmission and anti-torque system. The CRW will be much lighter and simpler than traditional rotorcraft and will therefore be much cheaper to operate and support.
X MARKS THE SPOT
Boeing's historical involvement in X-vehicle development includes the X-3 Stilleto, X-10 Navaho missile 'X' program, X-15 rocket plane, X-20 Dyna-Soar, X-30 National Aerospace Plane, X-31A Enhanced Fighter Maneuverability/ VECTOR, X-32 A/B Boeing Joint Strike Fighter, X-36 Tailless Fighter Agility Research Aircraft, X-37 reusable space plane, X-40A Space Maneuver Vehicle, X- 43A Hyper-X Hypersonic Research Vehicle, X-45A Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle and now the X-50A Canard Rotor/Wing.Aviation enthusiasts may have noticed that the X-50 designation was not the next in line. But Boeing's X-50 program manager Steve Bass said that Boeing got the number out of sequence by special request because the X-50 designation is so fitting for the CRW concept - 50 percent helicopter and 50 percent airplane.
Boeing
the X-50 Canard Rotor / Wing (CRW)
The Army, Navy and Marine Corps have a need for affordable, survivable, vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) air vehicles to support dispersed units in littoral and urban areas. The Canard Rotor/Wing (CRW) program explores innovative VTOL technologies and concepts with the potential for significant performance improvements that would satisfy stressing mission needs. One such concept is the advanced Canard Rotor/Wing (CRW) aircraft, that offers the potential for a high speed rapid response capability from a VTOL unmanned air vehicle with significant range and stealth improvements as compared to other VTOL concepts. Design and fabrication of this scaled vehicle concept will validate the command and control, stability and control system and aerodynamic performance required for vertical take-off, landing and hover via a rotating center wing that stops and locks in place for efficient high speed cruise.
An operational CRW UAV would be able to take off and land in confined areas without a launch or recovery system, rapidly transition to and from a fixed wing mode and fly at speeds in access of 375 knots. The flexibility achieved through these various flight modes, combined with the high-speed performance and survivability of this revolutionary new concept makes the CRW an exciting option for manned and unmanned applications.
Boeing has leveraged specific expertise that was developed during the company's previous work on reaction drive rotor systems, including both the XH-17 in the early 1950s and the XV-9A in the mid-1960s. The Boeing patented CRW concept is an outgrowth from these previous activities.
In response to a Navy requirement for an unmanned, high-speed, ship-based vertical take off and landing (VTOL), McDonnell Douglas Helicopter developed a concept called Canard-Rotor-Wing (CRW). The CRW is a stoppable-rotor design which can hover and fly at low-speeds like a conventional helicopter, whereas in its stopped-rotor mode it can fly at high speeds comparable to those of fixed-wing aircraft. Initial concepts include a land- or ship-based medium-range vertical takeoff and landing, remotely piloted vehicle. An operational CRW UAV would be able to take off and land in confined areas without a launch or recovery system, rapidly transition to and from a fixed wing mode and fly at speeds in access of 375 knots.
The CRW is propelled in both rotary-wing and fixed-wing modes using a conventional turbofan engine. A diverter valve directs the exhaust gas produced by the engine either to the rotor or aft to the jet thrust nozzle, or to both during transition. A two-bladed teetering rotor is used to generate the required lift for hover and low-speed forward flight. The CRW would spin a center wing to take off like a helicopter.The vehicle would then accelerate to about 120 knots when flaps would deploy from the front and rear wings. Once the rotorcraft is at a sufficient forward velocity, the required lift generation is transferred from the rotor to a canard and horizontal tail. Flap deployment would off load the spinning center wing, which could then stop rotation and be locked into a position across the fuselage to perform as a third wing. The flaps on the other two wings would then be retraced and all three wings would share the lift loads in a fixed wing flight mode. A reverse of these events would transition the CRW back to its rotary wing--VTOL mode for landing on small landing areas.
By using a reaction-drive rotor system, the CRW concept eliminates the need for a mechanical drive train and transmission, as well as the need for an anti-torque system. Eliminating these typically heavy, maintenance-intensive systems will greatly reduce vehicle weight, maintenance, complexity, and cost. Because the CRW's rotor is stopped to allow high-speed forward flight, the rotor's airfoil cross section must be elliptical. This is a compromise between the optimum airfoil shape for conventional rotor flight and that for high-speed stopped-rotor flight.
Possible manned and unmanned missions for such a vehicle include reconnaissance, communications and data relay, logistics re-supply, urban operations and delivery of both lethal and non-lethal munitions. The Navy and Marine Corps have expressed a strong interest in the CRW concept for both tactical UAV applications requiring VTOL operations from small-deck ships and manned applications such as a V-22 Osprey escort. They have funded a portion of the research activities to date and are considering transitioning this technology into a UAV engineering, manufacturing, and development phase following its successful flight demonstration.
In June 1998 a $24 million agreement between the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and The Boeing Company funded a 37 month effort by the Boeing Phantom Works to design, build and fly two technology demonstrators to assess and validate this advanced rotorcraft. DARPA and Boeing agreed to a 50/50 cost share agreement to validate this revolutionary concept in a joint advanced technology demonstration program known as "Dragonfly". Each contributed $12 million toward the program, initially planned to lead to flight demonstration in early 2001.
Development of the technology demonstrators is being conducted by Phantom Works personnel in Mesa, Ariz., St. Louis, Mo., as well as several other Boeing facilities. Final assembly is now under way at the Mesa facility, with a first flight expected in 2002.
On 04 December 2003 the Boeing Company's Canard Rotor/Wing (CRW) concept demonstrator completed its first hover flight at the U.S. Army Proving Ground in Yuma, Ariz. During the flight test, the CRW advanced technology demonstrator – known as the X-50A Dragonfly – flew for about 80 seconds at 8:10 a.m. MST. It lifted off vertically from the launch site to an altitude of 12 feet above the ground, hovered and then vertically landed, commencing the flight test program.
The unmanned X-50A CRW has a length of 17.7 feet and is 6.5 feet high. The rotor blades have a diameter of 12 feet. Powered by a conventional turbofan engine, the X- 50A will utilize diverter valves to direct thrust to the rotor blade tips (for helicopter mode), or aft to the jet nozzle (for fixed wing mode). Dual bleed thrust will be used during transition. By directing thrust through the rotor tips, the CRW concept eliminates the need for a heavy and complex mechanical drive train, transmission and anti-torque system. The CRW will be much lighter and simpler than traditional rotorcraft and will therefore be much cheaper to operate and support.
Follow-on CRW versions could evolve into larger, piloted vehicles capable of conducting specialized missions, including reconnaissance, armed escort, urban operations, tactical air support, communications/data relay and resupply. With such flexibility, operations could originate from small-deck ships or forward bases.
Aviation enthusiasts may have noticed that the X-50 designation was not the next in line. But Boeing's X-50 program manager Steve Bass said that Boeing got the number out of sequence by special request because the X-50 designation is so fitting for the CRW concept - 50 percent helicopter and 50 percent airplane.
Global Security
The Boeing X-50A Dragonfly
Click on Picture to enlarge
The Boeing X-50A Dragonfly, formerly known as the Canard Rotor/Wing Demonstrator, is a Gyrodyne unmanned aerial vehicle that was being developed by Boeing and DARPA to demonstrate the principle that a helicopter's rotor can be stopped in flight and act as a fixed wing. The X-50A builds upon the work of the Sikorsky X-Wing program of the 1980s by designing the vehicle as a multi-mode aircraft from the ground up. The X-50A is one of two projects funded by DARPA in its "Heliplane" program.
Development
The X-50A was a joint program between Boeing and DARPA, with each paying for half the development costs. The X-50A is powered by a single conventional turbofan engine. For rotary-wing mode, the engine's exhaust of which is diverted to nozzles in the tips of the rotor blades. When the aircraft transitions to full forward flight, the engine exhaust is directed through a nozzle at the rear of the aircraft and the rotor is locked into a fixed position and functions as a conventional wing. Two proof-of-concept aircraft were built as part of the program. The X-50A's maiden flight took place on 24 November 2003.
Crashes
During the third flight of the prototype X-50A, on 23 March 2004, the vehicle crashed, as a result of cross-coupling in the controls.
A second, improved prototype (Ship 2) was then built. On its sixth of 11 planned test flights, Ship 2 was completely destroyed in a crash at the Yuma Proving Grounds on April 12, 2006. Subsequent investigation revealed that the aircraft's fuselage was subject to an aerodynamic pitching moment of extreme sensitivity. Both airspeed and rotor wake would produce a nose-up pitching motion that was greater than the flight controls could compensate for.
Outcome
Neither aircraft was able to achieve transition to full forward flight mode during the portions of the test flight program that were completed. In September, 2006, DARPA recognized the inherent design flaws and withdrew funding for the program.
Specifications
Boeing X-50A
- Length overall: 5.39m
- Height overall: 1.98m
- Wing span/rotor diameter: 3.66m
- Foreplane(canard) span: 2.71m
- Tail unit span: 2.47m
- Power unit: 1 x Williams Research F-112
- Empty weight: 574kg
- Fuel weight: 66kg
- Max payload: 91kg
- Max. take-off weight: 645kg
- Max level speed: 278km/h
- Max speed: 700 km/h
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