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USS THEODORE ROOSEVELT, At Sea, Aug. 18, 2014 – The Navy’s
experimental unmanned X-47B air vehicle returned to carrier operations aboard
USS Theodore Roosevelt Aug. 17 and completed a series of tests, operating
safely and seamlessly with manned aircraft.
Building on lessons learned from its first test period
aboard the Roosevelt in November 2013, the X-47B team is now focused on
perfecting deck operations and performing maneuvers with manned aircraft in the
flight pattern.
“Today we showed that the X-47B could take off, land and fly
in the carrier pattern with manned aircraft while maintaining normal flight
deck operations,” said Navy Capt. Beau Duarte, program manager for the Navy’s
Unmanned Carrier Aviation office. “This is key for the future Carrier Air
Wing.”
The first series of manned/unmanned operations began when
the ship launched an F/A-18 and an X-47B. After an eight-minute flight, the
X-47B executed an arrested landing, folded its wings and taxied out of the
landing area. The deck-based operator used newly developed deck handling
control to manually move the aircraft out of the way of other aircraft,
allowing the F/A-18 to touch down close behind the X-47B’s recovery.
This cooperative launch and recovery sequence will be
repeated multiple times over the course of the planned test periods. The X-47B
performed multiple arrested landings, catapults, flight deck taxiing and deck
refueling operations.
“For this test period, we really focused on integration with
manned aircraft,” said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brian Hall, X-47B flight test director.
“We re-engineered the tailhook retract actuator and updated operating software
to expedite wingfold during taxi, both of which reduce time in the landing area
post-recovery. Our goal was to minimize the time in the landing area and
improve the flow with manned aircraft in the landing pattern.”
“The X-47B’s air vehicle performance, testing efficiency and
safety technologies and procedures developed and tested throughout the
program’s execution have paved the way for the Navy’s future carrier-based
unmanned system capability,” said Navy Rear Adm. Mat Winter, who oversees the
Program Executive Office for Unmanned Aviation and Strike Weapons.
The X-47B will remain aboard CVN 71 for the duration of the
underway period. It will perform additional cooperative deck and flight
operations with F/A-18s and complete night deck handling and flying quality
evaluations.
The Navy will continue X-47B flight operations over the next
year to refine the concept of operations to demonstrate the integration of
unmanned carrier-based aircraft within the carrier environment and mature
technologies for the future Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and
Strike system.
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