US Navy, Boeing
conduct first-ever refueling between unmanned tanker, F-35C
By Megan Eckstein Sep 14,
10:43 PM
An
MQ-25 test asset conducts its first aerial refueling test flight with an F-35C
Lightning II on Sept. 13 near the MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Illinois.
(Boeing photo)
US Navy, Boeing
conduct first-ever refueling between unmanned tanker, F-35C
By Megan Eckstein
Sep 14,
10:43 PM
An
MQ-25 test asset conducts its first aerial refueling test flight with an F-35C
Lightning II on Sept. 13 near the MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Illinois.
(Boeing photo)
WASHINGTON
— The U.S. Navy’s MQ-25 Stingray unmanned tanker conducted its first aerial refueling
with an F-35C Joint Strike Fighter, the third aircraft type to take fuel from
the Navy’s first unmanned system designed to deploy in a future carrier strike
group.
Boeing’s T1
test aircraft and an F-35C from the Navy’s Air Test Wing and Evaluation
Squadron 23 conducted a three-hour mission on Sept. 13, taking off from the
MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Mascoutah, Ill., and then going through a
methodical process of linking up and refueling in this test environment. The
Navy pilot conducted surveys and evaluations of the unmanned aircraft and the
air around it before connecting with its drogue at 225 knots and 10,000 feet
altitude. An air vehicle operator at the ground control station then initiated
the fuel transfer from T1′s aerial refueling store to the F-35C.
“Every T1 flight with another Type/Model/Series aircraft gets us one step
closer to rapidly delivering a fully mission-capable MQ-25 to the fleet,” Navy
program manager Capt. Chad Reed said in a news release. “Stingray’s unmatched
refueling capability is going to increase the Navy’s power projection and
provide operational flexibility to the carrier strike group commanders.”
The latest
refueling follows a six-hour test flight on Aug. 18, when the MQ-25 refueled an
E-2D Advanced Hawkeye for the first time. The E-2D was not originally built to
receive fuel in-air but was modified to add the aerial refueling capability in
2019.
“Once
operational, the MQ-25 will refuel every receiver-capable platform including
E-2,” Reed said in a separate news release on the August flight test between T1
and the Navy’s Air Test and Evaluation Squadron Two Zero (VX) 20. “This flight
keeps us on a fast track to getting the Stingray out to the fleet where its
refueling capability will greatly increase the range and operational
flexibility of the carrier air wing and strike group.”
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