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Defense Industry News - Northrop Grumman / Bell Helicopter |
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Friday,
17 December 2010, 12:50 PM |
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Fire-X
vertical unmanned aircraft completed its first fully autonomous
flight. |
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SAN
DIEGO --- Fire-X, a vertical unmanned air system (VUAS)
developed by Northrop Grumman Corporation and Bell Helicopter,
a Textron company, completed its first fully autonomous
flight Dec. 10 at Yuma Proving Ground, Ariz., less than
one year after development began.
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Fire-X vertical unmanned aerial aircraft |
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"The speed which Fire-X was developed shows that
a low-risk, fast-track solution can be safely flown using
the proven MQ-8B Fire Scout's unmanned systems autonomous
flight architecture," said Paul Meyer, sector vice
president and general manager of the Advanced Programs
and Technology Division at Northrop Grumman Aerospace
Systems. "We developed a VUAS that meets growing
needs for cargo and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance
(ISR) capabilities. We can now expand Fire-X's operational
capabilities to meet emerging U.S. military requirements
in all the Services and Special Operations Command."
First flight involved a short-duration hover to validate
safe and reliable autonomous flight. Additional flight
tests and reliability data gathering will be conducted
in the coming weeks. Integration of ISR sensor payloads
and cargo carrying capability test flights is set to occur
early next year.
First flight was accomplished in 11 months after development
began. It was achieved by integrating Fire Scout's proven
autonomous systems developed for the U.S. Navy with the
highly successful Bell 407 helicopter, a FAA-certified
helicopter that's been in commercial service worldwide
since 1996.
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