US Army Selected Bell’s V-280 Valor Tiltrotor, As Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft to Replace UH-60 Black Hawk.
After
a thoroughly strenuous and lengthy period of flight tests spread over several
years, the Army has chosen Bell’s V-280 Valor advanced tiltrotor to replace the
venerable UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter.
The
Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft, Valor is set to enter service in the
mid-2030s. Bell beat out Sikorsky and Boeing’s Defiant X compound coaxial
helicopter based on Sikorsky’s X2 technology.
While
somewhat stingy on the specifics of why the Army chose Bell’s tiltrotor over
Sikorsky’s pusher-compound-rotor design derived from the company's 'X2'
technology, Barrie said the decision boiled down to a “best value
proposition."
“Can
we be more specific on the factors of how exactly we arrived at this point?
No,” Barrie said. “However, best value is meant in the truest sense that it was
a comprehensive analysis of a variety of factors. No one really drove that
decision. So, if you look broadly at a very high level, the factors are
variables and performance, cost, and schedule, all were considered, and the
combination of those are defined explicitly and evaluated ... that is what I
would describe as the best value . and what the Army would describe as its best
value selection.”
The
award is a huge win for Bell. The company recently completed planned deliveries
of the latest versions of the venerable H-1 family of rotorcraft to the Marine
Corps, built the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior that the Army retired years ago, and,
with Boeing, developed variants of the V-22 Osprey for the Marines, Air Force, and
Navy.
“This
is an exciting time for the U.S. Army, Bell, and Team Valor as we modernize the
Army’s aviation capabilities for decades to come,” said Mitch Snyder, president
and CEO of Bell. “Bell has a long history supporting Army Aviation and we are ready
to equip soldiers with the speed and range they need to compete and win using
the most mature, reliable, and affordable high-performance long-range assault
weapon system in the world.”
Both
teams delivered their specific pitch for Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft in
September of last year. The Sikorsky-Boeing Defiant X is a refined version of
the Army’s Joint Multirole Technology Demonstration program, in which the Valor
was its prime competitor.
Valor
posted hundreds of flight hours in its flight test campaign and notched more
than the 280 knots speed it was named for and designed to achieve. Conventional
helicopters cannot get anywhere near that speed. In fact, the V-280, which is a
demonstrator and not a finalized design for the Army, broke the 300-knot
barrier in testing.
Valor’s
first flight occurred on Dec. 18, 2017, and has since logged more than 200
hours in the air and met a number of ambitious speed and agility goals set by
the Army under the Joint Multi-Role Technology Demonstration program.
V-280
improved upon the Bell-Boeing V-22 with its tilting nacelles rather than the
V-22’s tilting engines. In many ways, this win gives Bell a chance to improve
upon its tiltrotor technology, with the V-280 specifically designed to leverage
lessons learned by developing and fielding the Osprey and the hundreds of
thousands of hours flown by the type in some of the world's harshest
conditions. Maintainability and affordability are very much design drivers for
Valor.
The
Defiant team released a statement following the Army's announcement.
"We
remain confident DEFIANT X is the transformational aircraft the U.S. Army
requires to accomplish its complex missions today and well into the future. We
will evaluate our next steps after reviewing feedback from the Army," the
companies said.
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