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jamieooh
05-01-2012, 08:02 PM
Deflated: America’s Airship Revolution is Threatened by Mishaps, Delays, Funding Cuts
May. 1, 2012 - 02:06PM |
By William Matthews
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Think back to 2008. Hundreds of U.S. troops were being killed and maimed each month by roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the Pentagon was pouring billions of dollars into technology to defeat the improvised explosive devices. The Army was buying mine-resistant, ambush-protected armored troop carriers by the tens of thousands, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates was browbeating his generals to field more surveillance unmanned aircraft.

The military launched ambitious efforts to build airships that would provide an unblinking eye over Afghanistan, and 2011 was supposed to be the year when the first efforts bore fruit. The Army and Air Force were vying to be first to fly football-field-length airships over Afghanistan, while a separate research team prepared to test the feasibility of a stratospheric airship.

Compared with standard unmanned planes, airships held the promise of staying aloft for days or weeks while carrying at least three times as much payload: infrared and high-definition optical video cameras, multiple radars, high-powered computers to process sensor data, and communications equipment to transmit the information on demand to users on the ground.

Plus, airship promoters promised they could do all that for a fraction of the cost of current unmanned aircraft.

“Everybody was chasing the Holy Grail of persistent surveillance, and airships promised to do it better and cheaper,” said a government analyst who is now examining airship programs. Cost, duplication and technical problems prompted some members of Congress to request a closer look.

The Defense Department has spent more than $1 billion on at least nine programs in recent years, yet the military owns just one working airship, a piloted Navy blimp called MZ-3A, which is used for research.

U.S. government watchdog agencies and independent engineers are beginning to ask tough questions because so far, the military doesn’t have much to show for its money:

• HALE-D, a $150 million “high-altitude, long-endurance demonstrator” built for the Army by Lockheed, crashed in July on its first flight, well before reaching its intended stratospheric altitude. The program is still on the books but has run out of money, the Army said.

• HiSentinel, a disposable Army airship designed to operate above 60,000 feet, has flown three times since 2005, but also has been plagued by problems. One flight was cut short when the airship sprang a leak; a second flight was aborted when the ship’s solar-powered propulsion system failed. HiSentinel, too, is out of money, and the shrinking defense budget makes future funding unlikely, the Army said.

• Blue Devil 2, an optionally piloted airship named for its “Blue Devil” multi-intelligence payload, is being canceled by the Air Force, effective in June, after multiple missed deadlines, technical setbacks and cost overruns.

• LEMV — or Long Endurance Multi-Intelligence Vehicle — an Army optionally piloted airship with an almost identical mission to Blue Devil 2’s, is struggling with missed deadlines and questions about its design. For months, government officials have been saying it is expected to fly soon, with the latest goal being April or May.

Three other high-altitude airship programs remain in early stages of development. They are the Navy’s balloonlike Star Light airship, which will have a detachable return vehicle; the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Integrated Sensor Is Structure, or ISIS, airship, whose radar will double as the ship’s airframe; and the Army’s High Altitude Shuttle System, which would have a detachable return vehicle and a disposable gas envelope.

Today, Blue Devil 2 (BD2) floats in a hangar in Elizabeth City, N.C., as work continues to complete construction of the 370-foot-long airship.

Started in early 2011 by 4-year-old aerospace company Mav6, BD2 was designed to fuse wide-area surveillance imagery with signals intelligence to rapidly spot and target bomb planters in Afghanistan. It would carry its 2,500-pound payload at about 20,000 feet and keep a round-the-clock watch over a 36-square-mile area for up to nine days at a time. Computers onboard would process the data collected by the airship’s sensors, rather than clogging bandwidth by transmitting vast volumes of raw data to the ground. Onboard data processing also was intended to permit Blue Devil 2 to operate with a smaller processing, exploitation and dissemination ground station.

The Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization and the Pentagon’s ISR Task Force were keenly interested in the airship, which was supposed to arrive in Afghanistan by early this year.

But Mav6 said it encountered problems with suppliers. Overweight tail fins had to be redesigned and modified, causing delays. The most advanced camera had to be replaced because its proprietary data interface turned out to be incompatible with the Air Force distribution system. The avionics were more complicated than the vendor originally expected.

Mav6 has been urging the Air Force and Pentagon to push through the problems. Some technical issues were to be expected, the company said, because BD2 is the largest unmanned aircraft ever built and the largest airship hull built in 55 years. The technical troubles are far from unprecedented in scope for a groundbreaking intelligence project, it said. “For comparison, there is a space system that the [National Reconnaissance Office] director recently briefed that was 700 percent over timeline, and 300 percent over cost, but the DoD still pursued it,” retired Air Force Lt. Gen. David Deptula, now the CEO of Mav6, said by email.

The airship’s first flight was scheduled for October 2011 but has yet to occur. The deployment to Afghanistan has been canceled.

Funding for the program was conspicuously absent in February from the Air Force’s proposed 2013 research and development budget. After $66 million for 2011 and $63 million for 2012, there’s nothing for 2013.

Capt. Phillip Ventura, an Air Force spokesman, said in March that rising development costs, substantially higher sustainment costs and technical challenges prompted the Air Force to pull the plug on Blue Devil 2.

“The Air Force determined that these cost overruns, in the current fiscal environment, outweighed the potential benefits of a long-duration ISR capability. Consequently, the airship contract was definitized Jan. 31, and descoped to deliver only the airship by June 30,” Ventura said. The Air Force has not yet decided on what to do with the airship after it is delivered, he said.

Deptula and Mav6 have been pushing back hard, and the company now has at least two allies in Congress. Sens. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, and Thad Cochran, R-Miss., reminded the Pentagon in a Feb. 14 letter that as recently as November 2010, the Air Force considered Blue Devil 2 as “urgently needed,” and that “the U.S. Central Command continues to maintain a requirement for this capability.” They added that “it would be a significant failure to stop work and not deploy this much needed platform to Afghanistan.”

Inouye and Cochran are chairman and vice chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Deptula called the cancellation of Blue Devil 2 “pound-foolish” arguing that the airship would provide 20 times the endurance of the fixed-wing aircraft that fly the Blue Devil 1 sensor suite.

Blue Devil 2 used a “conventional” airship design. That is, it’s a nonrigid, blimp-shaped “envelope” filled with helium to make it lighter than air. It has ducted propellers mounted on each side for forward thrust and one on the rear for steering.

While the Air Force wraps up BD2 in North Carolina, the Army continues building a substantially different airship to do essentially the same ISR mission.

The Army’s LEMV is a hybrid airship. At 302 feet, it’s shorter than BD2, and it looks a bit like two blimps pushed together side by side to make an especially wide, two-lobed airship. Although helium-filled, LEMV is not lighter than air. It’s designed to stay aloft using lift generated by its aerodynamic shape moving through the air. Four ducted propellers are intended to get LEMV airborne and keep it going at about 20 knots.

Like BD2, the unmanned LEMV is supposed to fly at 20,000 feet carrying 2,500 pounds of surveillance and communications equipment. But the LEMV is supposed to stay aloft for up to 21 days, compared with BD2’s nine. Whether it can is a matter of debate.

The $517 million LEMV is nearly a year behind schedule. Its first flight was originally targeted for July 2011.

Built by Northrop Grumman and British airship maker Hybrid Air Vehicles, the LEMV was inflated last fall and now sits in a hangar at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in New Jersey. There, “the LEMV team is assembling the airship and integrating motors and electronics onto and into the vehicle,” officials from the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command said in mid-March. The Huntsville, Ala.-based command manages the LEMV program.

“The first flight of the LEMV will occur when the airship has completed integration activities,” said the officials, who would respond only to questions delivered by email.

Plans call for the LEMV to fly first from McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst and be flown in piloted mode to Melbourne, Fla., where Northrop operates a large aircraft facility and has set up LEMV test equipment. From Melbourne, LEMV is to be flown across Florida for “government testing” at Eglin Air Force Base, the Army officials said.

After that comes a Joint Military Utility Assessment, which Army documents say is to be conducted in Afghanistan.

In Afghanistan, LEMV will have a flight duration between five and 17 days, depending on altitude, payload, mission and seasonal winds in the region, according to the Pentagon. Northrop Grumman and Space and Missile Defense Command have said LEMV could provide up to 21 days of persistent surveillance. Northrop also predicts that the LEMV will be “vastly cheaper” to operate than today’s unmanned ISR aircraft — Predators, Reapers and Gray Eagles.

Using a measurement called “payload duration,” which is the weight of its sensors multiplied by the amount of time the aircraft can remain aloft, LEMV could outperform the Army’s Gray Eagle by a factor of 80, according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which examined the military’s airship programs last fall at the request of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

But the hybrid airship has its skeptics. Among them is Brandon Buerge, a Kansas-based aerospace engineer and former lead scientist for airship maker Guardian Flight Systems.

A hybrid airship the size of the LEMV, which must keep moving to stay airborne, will run out for fuel long before 21 days, Buerge said. He estimates that it can fly for about seven days. Others say four or five.

In a paper prepared for the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Buerge contends that conventional lighter-than-air ships, not hybrids, which depend on aerodynamic lift, are better suited for long-endurance flights.

“The lifting body hybrid airship model was capable of carrying more than twice the fuel load of the similarly sized conventional ship,” he said. But hybrids burn through fuel fairly fast. “The much lower average fuel burn predicted for the conventional ship resulted in generally superior loitering performance,” Buerge wrote.

Peter Van Staagen also questions LEMV’s ability to stay aloft for three weeks. Vice president and chief technology officer of Information Systems Laboratories, a San Diego firm that focuses on ISR technologies among others, Van Staagen said, “Carrying that amount of payload and flying that duration at those altitudes — all of those are singularly difficult. Doing one is hard, doing two is very difficult, doing all three is impossible” with current technology.

Van Staagen estimates that LEMV can stay aloft for about five days. The Army’s 21-day mission? “That’s a real stretch,” he said. But the skeptics’ evaluations “have fallen on deaf ears,” and a half-billion dollars has been spent on the LEMV, he said.

When asked about flight duration doubts, Army officials responded with a prepared statement: “Flight durations will depend on each specific mission set and payloads, and cannot be discussed.”

But LEMV’s endurance is being examined outside the Army. Complaints filed through the Government Accountability Office’s FraudNET charge the Army with “waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagement of federal funds” for proceeding with LEMV and ignoring claims that the LEMV could not meet the 21-day flight goal.

GAO has begun examining the program, but a GAO official declined to provide details while the evaluation is underway.

CBO did not question whether LEMV could meet the 21-day goal but suggested that cargo hauling might be an apt use for hybrid airships. Their combination of helium and aerodynamic lift enables them to carry more than conventional airships, and being heavier than air makes them easier to handle on the ground during loading and unloading, CBO said.

Meanwhile, the Navy continues flying its own airship under the MZ-3A program. The 178-foot-long, lighter-than-air vehicle is a commercial airship that began flying in 2007 and remains the sole working U.S. military airship.

This one is manned. It can carry a pilot and nine passengers — or 2,500 pounds — and stay aloft for more than 12 hours. Its maximum altitude is 9,500 feet.

MZ-3A — it doesn’t have a catchy aircraft nickname — is “a flying research and test lab,” said Burt Race, the deputy director of the Navy’s airship systems engineering team.

Often, passenger seats are removed to make space for equipment to be tested, typically ISR sensors and communications gear.

This spring, the airship is testing C4ISR systems for the Army. In 2010, the 45-knots-per-hour airship was sent to New Orleans to serve as a reconnaissance platform for the Coast Guard at the height of the Deepwater Horizon oil well blowout.

With Coast Guard observers onboard, the airship flew over the Gulf of Mexico searching for oil slicks, directing oil skimmers to them and monitoring the impact of oil on wildlife, Race said. Unlike helicopters, the virtually silent airship does not spook animals, he said.

MZ-3A is owned by the Naval Research Laboratory and based at Patuxent River Naval Air Station, Md., but “we’re expeditionary,” Race said. “We can move just about anywhere in the country. We go where the business is.” Indeed, the airship keeps flying only as long as it has paying customers, he said.

“We are an efficient platform from a fuel standpoint,” and since it’s a simple machine compared to a conventional aircraft, the airship requires relatively little maintenance and achieves “a very high readiness rate,” Race said. “If you need to fly a lot [to test equipment], the airship may be very economical.”

MZ-3A won’t be going to war. “It’s strictly R&D, a test platform for testing sensors,” said Doug Abbotts, a spokesman at the Naval Air Systems Command center at Pax River.

Whether any of the other airships make it to war looks increasingly questionable since the Iraq War has ended and withdrawal from Afghanistan is scheduled for 2014.

“All the urgency and willingness to take the risk and spend the money [on airships] came out of Iraq and Afghanistan,” Buerge said. But as the wars wind down, the urgency is subsiding and the money is drying up.

A shift in the National Military Strategy also clouds the future for airships. The absence of air defenses and opposing air forces in Iraq and Afghanistan provided the “permissive” environment airships need to operate.

But the new strategy focuses on Asia and the Pacific, where permissive environments are less likely. “If you’re operating in someone else’s sovereign airspace, an airship is not ideal,” Buerge said.
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serpa6
05-01-2012, 11:44 PM
Is that always the problem though fucking cost overruns every single new thing they have built It always overruns cost I say go with what we have now and improve it give the money to them manufactures and let them improve systems like predator global hawk New E-8 Program is almost ready I know some on the project and when it comes out battlefield surveillance is going to be a whole new ball game Just a little Hint Go Navy

jamieooh
06-24-2012, 11:25 PM
Make or Break Time for Blue Devil 2
Jun. 19, 2012 - 05:24PM |
By BEN IANNOTTA

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Mav6, the small company founded in 2007 with big plans to shake up tactical intelligence, expects to learn shortly whether the U.S. Navy will take over development of its football-field-sized airship from the Air Force.

For now, the optionally piloted, 370-foot-long airship continues to float in a hangar in Elizabeth City, N.C., with plans for a first flight, and perhaps the future of Mav6, hanging in the balance. The Air Force has said it will not fund the project beyond June 30.

Mav6 executives said about 90 percent of the 80-person company’s revenues have come from development of the M1400 airship — better known as Blue Devil 2, the name of its sensor package. An earlier version of the package, Blue Devil 1, flies on a turboprop.

Mav6 has been searching for a new sponsor in recent months, arguing that that ship would be great for patrolling borders or the open seas for pirates and drug runners.

The Navy, which once made regular use of airships for maritime patrols, emerged as the top prospect. Spokeswoman Lt. Courtney Hillson said June 19 that “at this time” she had no information about the possibility of the Navy adopting the program.

By now, the airship was supposed to be fusing signals intelligence and wide-area surveillance imagery in the skies over Afghanistan to aid in the hunt for improvised explosive devices and those who plant them. During development, the craft’s tailfins came in overweight, forcing engineers at subcontractor Eagle Aviation to pull composite material from them and begin a series of new tests. Engineers suspect that if the Navy adopts the airship, the fins will need rebuilt.

The airship project began under Army management, but in 2011 the Defense Department transferred it to the Air Force’s Big Safari aircraft group, which had rushed the camera and signals intelligence-equipped Liberty planes to Afghanistan. Big Safari decided it needed to hire a larger and more experienced company — L-3 Communications — to test the aircraft and operate it in Afghanistan, industry officials said.

The airship’s anticipated operating costs came in at $190 million a year — higher than anticipated — and the Air Force decided to stop funding the project.

After the Air Force announcement, Mav6 and Eagle Aviation pressed forward with the tailfin tests, and Mav6 argued it could operate the craft for about half of the $190 million expected with L-3 Communications in that role.

The Air Force was not swayed. On May 23, the service ordered Mav6 to disassemble the craft for packaging into a 40-foot container for storage at a site in Texas. Deflation will have to be done shortly, said a Mav6 executive who asked not to be named.

If the Navy ends up adopting the airship, the project will have been run by the three largest branches of the U.S. military — the Army, Air Force and Navy.
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