Fire X

Fire X VUAS

Not small but impressive, I wonder if they have kept the windows in to make it an OPV as well??

On Sept. 17, the team applied external power for the first time to the main computers and associated subsystems for its new Fire-X medium-range vertical unmanned aerial system (VUAS), currently in final integration and test at Bell Helicopter’s Xworx rapid prototyping facility in Fort Worth, Texas.

First flight for the new extended range, cargo-hauling VUAS, which is based on the FAA-certified Bell 407 airframe, is expected by the end of CY2010.

“The Fire-X ‘power-on’ sequence, which validates the integrity of the electrical system, went exactly as planned,” said George Spongberg, Northrop Grumman’s Fire-X program manager. “It confirmed that the air vehicle’s vehicle management system has been configured properly, and that all of the air vehicle’s new wire harnesses are delivering power at the right levels to all of the major subsystems.”

Fire-X’s new wire harnesses were produced, tested and installed by Bell Helicopter, he added.

The power-on event follows four months of Fire-X vehicle modifications at Xworx to convert a commercial Bell 407 from a piloted vehicle into an unmanned or optionally piloted vehicle. The modifications included not only removal of non-mission-essential equipment such as seats and sound insulation, but also installation of new wire harnesses and avionics required to control the vehicle in an unmanned configuration.

“The challenge,” explains Spongberg, “is to duplicate, using hardware and software, the behavior of the air vehicle when it is flown by a human. For example, we’re installing and testing actuators that will move the air vehicle’s flight control surfaces in response to commands from a ground control station the same way they would move in response to commands from a pilot in the cockpit.”

The team is also installing and validating the software that will perform critical guidance, navigation and control (GN&C) functions for the new system, he added.

Over the next month, the Northrop Grumman/Bell Fire-X team expects to conduct preliminary flights of the air vehicle in Fort Worth in a manned configuration to validate its GN&C system, then convert it back to an unmanned system. After completion of ground testing and engine runs, the air vehicle will be ferried, in an optionally piloted configuration, to the U.S. Army’s Yuma Proving Ground, Ariz. for final testing before Fire-X’s first demonstration flight in an unmanned configuration.

Fire-X is a fully autonomous, four-blade, single-engine unmanned helicopter that combines the best of two proven air systems in a low cost, fast-fielding package: the versatile reconnaissance, surveillance and target acquisition architecture of the U.S. Navy’s MQ-8B Fire Scout vertical takeoff and landing tactical UAV, and the extended range, payload and cargo hauling capabilities of the commercially mature Bell 407 helicopter.

Fire-X offers commanders a useful load of more than 3,000 pounds — for fuel, payloads and/or cargo. That load can typically support intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions up to 16 hours long, or cargo missions of 2,500 pounds out to a range of 110 nautical miles.


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Gary Mortimer

Founder and Editor of sUAS News | Gary Mortimer has been a commercial balloon pilot for 25 years and also flies full-size helicopters. Prior to that, he made tea and coffee in air traffic control towers across the UK as a member of the Royal Air Force.