Agreed. So while it might be a second (third?) generation tilt-rotor, it'll still look a lot like an Osprey. It might get stretched aboutReasons that the CMV-22B was chosen were that it could deliver to other ships of a Task Force while dispersed. It can also stay aboard the carrier and provides the Task Force with other options ranging from CSAR to humanitarian relief. So, at a minimum I would think that a replacement would; a. be VTOL, b. fold sufficiently to go underdeck, c. provides increased payload or cost efficiency to warrant the replacement.
I missed the dimension. It's only a 5ft stretch to wings and fuselage, to allow for proprotors +5ft in diameter.@Scott Kenny - size growth might reduce the number of ships that would be accessible. It would also have to auto-fold per USN shipboard requirement. If "the juice is worth the squeeze" for the expense I would agree larger more productivity to the fleet would be warranted.
I think that the Bell tilt/fold might be a logical next step.
Interestingly Sikorsky has just announced a return to the tilt-wing concept. That might produce an option as well.
One minor nuisance is that ASW is (generally) conducted at low altitude, while AEW/COD/Tanker are mid-to-high altitude jobs (20-30kft or more).If I were starting from scratch, I'd design from the ground up for an ASW, AEW, and COD variant. Possibly tanker as well.
But then you'd need a crane on every ship to haul the cargo up from the seaplane to the quarterdeck.For the pure COD mission, though, I might talk to Shin Meiwa about a seaplane. Much simpler than wrestling with V/STOL systems, and it can be made much larger.
For the pure COD mission, though, I might talk to Shin Meiwa about a seaplane. Much simpler than wrestling with V/STOL systems, and it can be made much larger.
I believe every ship already has at least one crane. They may not be very big.One minor nuisance is that ASW is (generally) conducted at low altitude, while AEW/COD/Tanker are mid-to-high altitude jobs (20-30kft or more).
Which makes your aerodynamic optimization a bit of a pain. (and IIRC why P-3s have round tipped props and C130s have square tipped props)
But hey, that's what you pay engineers a lot of money for!
But then you'd need a crane on every ship to haul the cargo up from the seaplane to the quarterdeck.
While an Osprey can land on any helipad and deliver 20klbs to the hangar deck.
I'm not sure they have a 10 ton crane on anything smaller than an LHA/LHD.I believe every ship already has at least one crane. They may not be very big.
Could probably stick one just aft of the rear spar of the wing. Wouldn't be too far aft of the CG limit for flying.On the other hand, I don't think the Shin Meiwa US-1 (or any variant of it) has a large roof hatch. Adding that would be somewhat non-trivial, as it would likely need to cut through where the wing structure is located.
Isn't that basically the Osprey already? (yes, I know, different mechanical system, but still props and VTOL)We could, of course, think about bringing back the XC-142 or something similar (enlarge the CL-84!)
I suppose that simply building and updating C2s is not an option?
At least as an insurance against the more complicated Osprey.