Bell Unveils V-247
Autonomous Tiltrotor and It’s the Size of a Huey
By Dan Parsons | September 25, 2018
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Send Feedback | @SharkParsons
The Bell V-247 autonomous tiltrotor was unveiled
at Modern Day Marine, Sept. 25, 2018. Photo by Dan Parsons
Bell unveiled the full-size mockup of its V-247
autonomous tiltrotor Sept. 25, and it is much larger than a scale-model
suggests.
Just outside the company’s booth at the Modern Day
Marine in Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, passersby kept up an
audible chorus of surprise as each caught a first glimpse of the unmanned
aircraft system (UAS), which is about the size of a UH-1Y Huey. It was designed
that way for several reasons, Todd Worden, Bell’s senior manager for advanced
tiltrotor systems, told R&WI.
“It’s all about achieving range and payload and
for that you need power and fuel,” he said. “It’s about the size of a [UH-1Y]
Yankee for that reason. The fuselage is about the same size, but then you add
the tiltrotor and it now provides a completely different, versatile
capability.”
The outline of a UH-1Y is painted as a shadow beneath
the full-size mockup at the expo to show the relative size and how it will fit
on Navy ships. The 247 was designed inside the “box” of a DDG hangar, which
means it can fit on and inside just about any ship that can accept rotorcraft,
Worden said.
All of the design parameters are aimed at meeting
Marine Corps requirements for MUX, which stands for Marine Air-Ground Task
Force (MAGTF) Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) Experimental. The Marines are in the
market for a Group 5 UAS — think MQ-9 Reaper — capable of vertical takeoff and
landing.
Size comparison with wings folded of the V-22
Osprey (L-R), the V-247 and the UH-1Y.
“We are pacing ourselves against the Marine Corps’
mission requirements for MUX,” Worden said.
That pace, so far, has been relatively swift for
an aircraft development program thanks to the 247’s older brother, the V-280
Valor. Having now flown 60 hours, the Valor provided much of the one-time
engineering risk reduction work that ported directly into designing the 247,
Worden said.
“All the work that went into the V-280, we are
porting into the 247,” he said. “We accomplished a lot of firsts with that
aircraft, and now we don’t have to do all those firsts on this aircraft. Every
time the V-280 flies, we further reduce the engineering and development risk
with this aircraft.”
A single centerline Rolls-Royce 1107C — the same
engine used in the V-22 — with bifurcated inlets and a single aft upward
exhaust provides 7,000 shp to the two rotor nacelles. To maximize lift surface
and thereby fuel efficiency and range, the wings continue past the nacelles and
terminate in winglets while the V-280’s nacelles are at the end of its wings.
The outer wings swivel with the nacelle when the 247 transitions from vertical
to forward flight.
Bell is advertising a long-range cruise speed of
240 kt with a 300-kt maximum, while best endurance speed is 180 kt. With two
aircraft, Worden said the aircraft can sustain 24-hour on-station operations at
mission-viable ranges, hence the “247” designation. Specifically, Bell is
aiming for more than eight hours loiter time with a 600-pound payload at 450-nm
mission radius.
It should have an internal mission payload
capacity of 2,000 pounds and a slingload capacity of 9,000 pounds. That
capacity is what will make the aircraft so versatile, Worden said.
“It is really a modular, open-architecture
platform that can accommodate any weapon in the service’s inventory or on hand
for a particular mission,” he said.
Two conformal belly pods can carry electronic
warfare equipment or AIM-9X Sidewinder air-to-air missiles. The mockup has four
underwing pylons with various configurations of Hellfire Missiles and Textron
Fury glide bombs.
That modularity also may make the drone
appropriate for other services, Worden said. Bell is closely following the
Army’s next-generation UAS program, for instance.
The Bell V-247 autonomous tiltrotor was unveiled
at Modern Day Marine, Sept. 25, 2018. Photo by Dan Parsons
But the unveiling was tailored to the Marine Corps
because it is in the market for a high-altitude, long-endurance drone that can
launch from a ship, perform reconnaissance and relay communication to deployed
ground forces for about $20 million per copy.
Other missions for MUX will include airborne early
warning and electronic warfare. Offensive air support has been pushed to a
secondary mission profile as the service begins to solidify its requirements.
The request for information (RFI) describes a
fully autonomous air vehicle that can take off from and land on
helicopter-capable amphibious ships or an austere 150-foot-by-150-foot landing
zone. It should cruise at speeds of 200 to 300 kt with a full payload and stay
on station at least eight to 12 hours at 350 nm mission radius. Unrefueled it should
have a range of 350 to 700 nm from the ship.
Fast is the name of the game for development and
procurement, and the Marine Corps is prepared to move as fast as technology
will allow, Lt. Gen. Steven Rudder said at a June industry day near Quantico.
After an acquisition decision planned for fiscal 2020, the service wants a
land-based early operational capability in within five years and a land-based
initial operational capability two years later, with a sea-based IOC to follow.
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