Aircraft

DARPA VTOL X-plane takes flight in miniature

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The flight was conducted using a 1/5 scale model
Aurora Flight Sciences
Artist's concept of LightningStrike in flight
Aurora Flight Sciences
Artist's concept of LightningStrike showing ducts
Aurora Flight Sciences
Artist's concept of LightningStrike in vertical flight mode
Aurora Flight Sciences
The subscale model of LightningStrike
Aurora Flight Sciences
LightningStrike includes 3D-printed components
Aurora Flight Sciences
The flight was conducted using a 1/5 scale model
Aurora Flight Sciences
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It may look like a backwards airplane with a collection of fans for wings, but a miniature test version of DARPA's Vertical Take-off and Landing Experimental Plane (VTOL X-Plane) took to the skies recently. According to the builder, Aurora Flight Sciences, the subscale vehicle demonstrator (SVD) prototype of the LightningStrike successfully completed a series of takeoff, hover, and landing maneuvers at an undisclosed US military base.

The recent flight was conducted by an Aurora team from a ground control station with oversight from US government officials and is part of the goal to build a full-size demonstrator aircraft to validate the LightningStrike's technology. Tipping the scales at 325 lb (147 kg), the one fifth scale SVD uses wings and canards made of carbon composites and 3D-printed plastics to produce the necessarily complex structures while keeping weight down.

When finished, the full-scale LightningStrike will be the first to use a distributed hybrid-electric propulsion system with synchronous electric-drive. The unmanned aircraft will reach a top sustained speed of 300 to 400 knots (345 to 460 mph, 555 to 740 km/h), hover with an efficiency of at least 75 percent instead of the current 60 percent, reduce the cruise lift-to-drag ratio from five or six to 10, and carry a payload equal to 40 percent of the X-Plane's 10,000 to 12,000 lb (4,536 to 5,443 kg) gross weight.

The subscale model of LightningStrike
Aurora Flight Sciences

According to Aurora, the program is now in Phase II under which Aurora was awarded a contract on March 3 to build the unmanned VTOL X-Plane demonstrator based on the company's Phase I design competition entry. The full-size demonstrator is expected to be built in the next year, during which the Aurora engineers will work on more testing and validation of the flight controls as well as the full-scale aircraft's configuration.

"Our design's distributed electric propulsion system involves breaking new ground with a flight control system requiring a complex set of control effectors," says Tom Clancy, Aurora's chief technology officer. "This first flight is an important, initial confirmation that both the flight controls and aerodynamic design are aligning with our design predictions."

The video below shows the subscale demonstrator taking to the skies.

Source: Aurora Flight Sciences

View gallery - 6 images
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3 comments
christopher
Hmm. $89 Million dollars to build what any garage R/C geek could do in a week.
PrometheusGoneWild.com
I have two issues with the design: -The tilt wing is just a bad idea. It introduces multiple critical fail points. -Without a direct turbine to prop output, there will be a significant loss of efficiency. Laditude Engineering had a better design. Their biggest issue is they are still thinking in terms of a drone and not an manned/unmanned aircraft...
Snafu
They should have got Peter from flitetest to help them out - he's been making VTOL model aircraft for several year out of foamboard - could have saved themselves about $88,999,950