The Stranded USAF CV-22 Osprey Has Finally
Been Recovered
The tiltrotor was stuck in the Norwegian wilderness for six weeks after an
emergency landing.
A CV-22B Osprey tiltrotor aircraft,
belonging to RAF Mildenhall’s 352nd Special Operations Wing, was stranded in the
Norwegian wilderness after
an emergency landing on Aug. 12, 2022. The Osprey was stuck in the Stongodden
nature reserve on the island of Senja for six weeks, until the US and Norwegian
militaries were able to finally recover it.
The CV-22, assigned to the 7th Special
Operations Squadron, was involved in a training exercise when the emergency
happened. The aircraft experienced a “hard clutch engagement”, which prompted
the crew to immediately land as part of the emergency checklist. The incident
was the second hard clutch engagement in six weeks, and the command therefore
ordered a temporary safety
stand-down of its 52 Ospreys.
As we already reported,
hard clutch engagement occurs when the clutch connecting the propeller’s gear
box to its engine slips and the Osprey transfers the power load from that
engine to the other one, allowing it to keep
flying in the event of an engine failure, and then the power load in transferred back to the
original engine as its clutch engages again. The large transfer of torque
between the two engines within a span of milliseconds throws the aircraft off
balance.
The Norwegian Armed Forces worked with the local environmental
protection office to plan the recovery of the Osprey from the nature reserve,
in collaboration with the U.S. Air Force. The proposed plan was said to be
incredibly complicated and something neither the Norwegian nor the Americans
have done before. The plan, in fact, involved the creation of a small wooden
road to protect vulnerable wildlife at the reserve without destroying the
terrain while the aircraft was moved closer to shore.
“It [was very] demanding,” said Royal
Norwegian Air Force Command Sergeant Major Odd Helge Wang. “The challenge [was
how] shallow [the area was], and the machine weighs 20 tons.” Many obstacles
stood in the team’s way to recovering the CV-22, including weather delays and
the more sensitive hurdle of preventing damage to the local fauna. “[We’ve
brought] 430 tons of equipment in to carry this out, so there will be some wear
and tear,” Wang said. “We have tried to do everything as gently as possible.”
The recovery operation started on September 12 at the
NATO port in Sørreisa, where equipment and materials were readied for transport
and loaded onto a barge. The equipment included an excavator, crane, small
bobcat and wooden mats. Severe weather initially delayed the arrival of the
crane barge, with the recovery effort also postponed a day because of rough
weather, which created 6-foot-high waves off the rocky shore.
Soldiers from Norwegian
Army Engineer Battalion were in charge of the construction of the wooden road.
By the time the works started on September 14, all fuel had been
drained from the Osprey,
making it lighter and safer to move. The aircraft was then dug from the ground
and moved up about 55 feet toward the bay via the makeshift road, where the
crane barge was waiting to pick it up.
As we reported, disassembling the CV-22
was ruled out due to concerns of the aircraft becoming unbalanced and toppling
over. Lifting it on the boat
was not an easy task,
as the Osprey weighs about 20 tonnes and, because of the very shallow waters, a
70-metre-long crane arm had to be used. On September 27, after multiple delays
due to the adverse weather, the CV-22 was finally lifted up aboard the barge.
“I’m so impressed by all parties involved who came together to make this
recovery operation a success,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Jeffrey Westerman,
recovery mission commander for the 352nd Special Operations Wing. “This
monumental operation wouldn’t have been possible without the hard work and
dedication from our allies and our Air Commandos, and we are immensely grateful
for everything the Norwegians have provided our team during the past weeks.”
After the barge returned to the port, the
aircraft was loaded on a truck and transported to a nearby Norwegian military
base. According to the Air Force Special Operations Command, the CV-22 has now been
recovered inside a hangar, where the maintenance crews will work to repair the
aircraft so it may fly again. When accomplished, the Osprey will return to its
home station in the United Kingdom.
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