Marines' Future Helicopter Will Be Optionally
Manned
As the Marine Corps enters the final stages of preparing to receive the
CH-35K King Stallion, its new heavy-lift workhorse helicopter, aviation
officials are already looking forward to the Corps' next generation of
rotorcraft.
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis, the Marine Corps' deputy commandant of aviation, told
reporters Friday at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., that
the Corps had asked for optionally manned capability for the Pentagon's future
vertical lift plan, which aims to develop replacement choppers for the Army and
other services.
"We've told them it's what we want," Davis said. "Why wouldn't we want
it?"
Davis said he envisioned a vertical lift platform that might be operated
unmanned to deliver cargo and manned for more sensitive or technically complex
missions.
Potentially, he said, such a platform, equipped with a sensor, could also
serve as an unmanned sentry of sorts from the air in defense of a deployed
ship.
Davis noted that the future vertical lift, or FVL, program is currently in
the down-select phases, and acquisition was expected to take place in the
2030s.
"The future of aviation is operationally manned," Davis said.
The Air Force and Marine Corps are both part of the FVL program, which is
led by the Army.
One candidate to satisfy FVL requirements is Bell's V-280 Valor aircraft, a
next-generation tiltrotor that does feature a fly-by-wire control system. The
other aircraft being evaluated in the FVL program, the medium-lift
Sikorsky/Boeing SB-1 Defiant, also features fly-by-wire capabilities.
Davis said Marine officials had communicated with both contracting teams
about their interest in optionally manned technology.
Meanwhile, the Marine Corps continues to evaluate concepts for a separate
unmanned or optionally manned air cargo and logistics platform.
In May, two Lockheed Martin/Kaman K-MAX optionally manned rotorcraft
arrived at Marine Corps' Operational Test & Evaluation Squadron 22 at Marine
Corps Air Station Yuma, Arizona, for testing and development designed to
evaluate their ability to perform surveillance and reconnaissance.
The K-MAX had previously deployed to Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, where
it assisted Marines in moving cargo and gear across the battlespace.
Marine logistics officials have also expressed interest in DARPA's Aerial
Reconfigurable Embedded System (ARES), an unmanned vertical lift platform
designed for cargo resupply, medevac and surveillance.
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