V-22A

Abstract

The V-22 Osprey is an Acquisition Category IC Joint Program led by the Department of the Navy for the purpose of developing, testing, evaluating, procuring and fielding a tilt rotor, vertical takeoff and landing aircraft for Joint Service application. The V-22 program is designed to provide an aircraft to meet the amphibious/vertical assault needs of the Marine Corps, the utility/rescue needs of the Navy, and the special operations needs of the Air Force and the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). The V-22 is replacing the CH-46E and CH53A/D in the Marine Corps with the MV-22; will supplement the H-60 in the Navy with the MV-22; and replace the MH-53J and MH-53M as well as augment the C-130 in the Air Force and USSOCOM with the CV-22. The V-22 is capable of flying over 2100 nautical miles with a single refueling, giving the services the advantage of a Vertical/Short Take-off and Landing aircraft that can rapidly self-deploy to any location in the world. This program is funded under Engineering Manufacturing and Development for correction of deficiencies and includes Block A and Block B upgrades which encompassed engineering and manufacturing development of new end-items prior to the production incorporation decision. Block C suitability and effectiveness development upgrades continue through FY12. Funding in FY11 addressed Capability Development Document interoperability requirements through a spiral upgrade acquisition strategy. These funds were the first spiral providing Key Enabling Department of Defense mandated open systems architecture upgrades for the mission computer hardware and software while simultaneously addressing required interoperability common avionics upgrades and current avionics obsolescence issues. Development efforts include Block C Upgrade, Mission System Upgrade, Mid-Wing Process Unit, ARC 210 Generation 5 Radio, Mission Computer Obsolescence Initiative, Ramp Mounted Weapon System, AAR-47 Hostile Fire Indicator, Time on Wing, and Blue Force Tracker/Netted Weather. FY12-13 funds initiate instrumentation of a test aircraft. Joint and Allied Threat Awareness System testing will continue in FY14 and funding will provide for additional Aircraft Mission Maneuvering Envelope Expansion, Velocity Not to Exceed Expansion, and Time on Wing efforts such as Improved Inlet Solution.

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Document Details

Document Type
R2 Budgetary Justification
Publication Date
Oct 01, 2014
Source ID
0604262N_5_1319_PB_2014
Change Summary Explanation
Technical: Not applicable Schedule: Instrumented Aircraft Test Delivery moved from 3Q 2014 to 1Q 2015 in accordance with contract. SSOT in 3rd QTRS of FY2013/FY2015/FY2017 now reflected as OT IIIJ, OT IIIK and OT IIIL. OT-C1 in 3rd QTR of FY2014 new from PB13.
Service Agency Name
Navy

Entities

Organizations

  • United States Navy

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Air Force
  • Aircrafts
  • Airframes
  • Contracts
  • Cost Analysis
  • Costs
  • Engineering
  • Flight Testing
  • Instrumentation
  • Logistics
  • Marine Corps
  • Software Development
  • Test And Evaluation
  • Tilt Rotor Aircraft
  • Vertical Takeoff Aircraft
  • Weapon Systems

Readers

  • Aerospace Engineering

Technology Areas

  • Fully Networked C3
  • Fully Networked C3 - Command and Control

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