Northrop Grumman R02, H03 Firebird (Scaled Composites Model 355)

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Keeping in line with his habit of putting out a new aircraft every year or so, Burt Rutan registered two new types in 2010 and 2011.

First one is the Scaled Composites LLC Model 355 (N355SX, c/n 001), a fixed wing twin-boom single pusher type certified on 24 Nov 2009 and manufactured in 2010. Airworthiness date was 02 Feb 2011. It could be optionally manned and may be used a surveillance platform (see attached photos).

Second one is the Scaled Composites LLC Model 367 (N367DF, c/n 001), a glider certified on 17 Mar 2011 which has not yet been completed or flown. This could be the final aircraft design that Burt Rutan has admittedly been working on as his personal aircraft for retirement.

Source: http://www.regosearch.com/search/results/?co=us&Nf1=manu&Of1=eq&Vf1=SCALED+COMPOSITES+LLC&adv=on
 

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French website Flight Aware indicates that the Model 355 was flown from Palmdale Regional Airport in California to Sierra Vista Municipal Airport in Nevada on 5 February 2011 (three days after airworthiness date), covering a distance of 500.93 miles in 2 hours and 16 minutes at a speed between 150 and 200 knots, on what may have been the aircraft's first flight.

http://fr.flightaware.com/live/flight/N355SX

According to Flickr member jw2513, who took the top picture on 16 April, Northrop Grumman has been doing flight tests with the Model 355 at McClellan Airfield (MCC) in Sacramento, California. Callsign of the aircraft is "SCAT 15".

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jw2513/5625811648/
 
Stargazer2006 said:
French website Flight Aware indicates that the Model 355 was flown from Palmdale Regional Airport in California to Sierra Vista Municipal Airport in Nevada on 5 February 2011 (three days after airworthiness date), covering a distance of 500.93 miles in 2 hours and 16 minutes at a speed between 150 and 200 knots, on what may have been the aircraft's first flight.

http://fr.flightaware.com/live/flight/N355SX

According to Flickr member jw2513, who took the top picture on 16 April, Northrop Grumman has been doing flight tests with the Model 355 at McClellan Airfield (MCC) in Sacramento, California. Callsign of the aircraft is "SCAT 15".

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jw2513/5625811648/

At Palmdale it may have been fitted with a sensor and range instrumentation package at NG. As far as I am aware there is not an instrumented range at MCC or Beale, however.

EDIT: I see on flightaware that on Monday it flew from Palmdale to Sierra Vista, AZ - Ft. Huachuca , which is home to many interesting organizations.
 
One of my contacts refused to tell me more about Model 355 but told me that we'd see more about that aircraft as of next Monday. Can't wait!!!
 
Stargazer2006 said:
One of my contacts refused to tell me more about Model 355 but told me that we'd see more about that aircraft as of next Monday. Can't wait!!!

I don't know how I forgot about this. There have been a number of airspace restrictions around Beale in the last few weeks. There was also an airshow (according to the NOTAMs), but the airspace restrictions apparently are continuing, and are mostly at night:
http://tfr.faa.gov/tfr2/list.html
Could be related to whatever N355SX was doing.
 
Scaled Composites Model 355 has now officially been revealed to be the Northrop Firebird OPV. See this thread:
http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,12624.0/topicseen.html
 
Oh, but it is, not to worry! At the time I didn't have enough to do one, but now we do!

The Firebird is is a medium-altitude aircraft that can carry a maximum of four payloads simultaneously and operate up to 40 hours in the unmanned mode. It was developed by Scaled Composites for Northrop Grumman Corp. under a program designated XUAS (presumably for eXperimental Unmanned Aircraft System), under supervision of a team that included Cory and Patti Bird (builders of the wonderful Symmetry).

Northrop Grumman will demonstrate the newly developed, optionally piloted Firebird aircraft at the Defense Department’s Empire Challenge exercise that will begin May 23 in Fort Huachuca, Ariz.., reports Aviation Week.

At the upcoming Empire Challenge exercise, the company plans to demonstrate four payloads: high-definition, full-motion video; electro-optical/infrared sensors; electronic support/direction finding; and communications relay.

Main source: http://defensesystems.com/articles/2011/05/06/agg-northrop-firebird-at-empire-challenge.aspx?admgarea=DS
 
Despite Aviation Week & Space Technology's article yesterday, Northrop Grumman and Scaled still do not communicate on the Firebird on their respective sites. A video was announced on NG's media page yesterday with no explanation, but the link was broken...

Meanwhile, I found this very nice-looking profile view by I. K. Erripis on the DIY DRONES website:
http://www.diydrones.com/photo/scaled-composites-northrop?xg_source=activity
 

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Very first photo of the Firebird was leaked by Jon Wright on his Flickr page a few days ago.
 

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A brand new photo of the Firebird from the rear end. Typical Rutan indeed!

Original hi-res pic can be found here:
http://sitelife.aviationweek.com/ver1.0/Content/images/store/2/1/6238b11b-f9aa-4c3b-b18c-e71536e091b5.Full.jpg
 

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Some specs:
 

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Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOZ4m5XkgC0
Graham Warwick aka theworacle said:
Northrop rumman video unveiling its Firebird optionally manned/unmanned aircraft. Designed and built by Scaled Composites as the Model 355, the Firebird is a medium-altitude long-endrance unmanned aircraft to compete with the General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper/Predator B, but with the option of build flown manned.
Source:
Code:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOZ4m5XkgC0
 
Ok, is it me or in both the three view and the drawings shown around 0:08 in the video show a split (i.e. not joined in the middle) horizontal tail?
 
I saw that too, structurally it would not make sense.
Must be a case of part left over before being handed out to marketing.
--Luc
 
What struck me more was the lack of air intake above the engine cowling in the official two-view plan.
 
The official two view plan is very simplistic, however both Proteus and Wight Knight have a twin-boom design with separate (but more distant). The most closely-related Scaled Composites project should be the model 309 (that led to Adam M-309). Apart from several details and the lack of the second engine at the front, they have more or less the same arrangement.

Stargazer2006 posted a link to my website (thank you!) where I speculated the possibility of swapping the cockpit for a satcom dish like other large UAVs. Northrop published already a photo without a cockpit canopy, it could be just a prototype version (although the N35SX had flied only with a pilot) or that concept is more likely. The photo (from the official NG facebook page):

227224_10150177586910975_90319605974_6972833_5711235_n.jpg
 
If you look at the promotional video, around 0:28 there is a CAD animation that shows structural break lines around what I can only imprecisely describe as "canopy lines". Basically you can swap the cabin canopy for the satcom fairing. the interesting part is getting the crew cockpit out, as I don't think you can keep seat, instruments and controls in and have room for the large dish shown in the three view.
 
Northrop Grumman has released some very nice new pictures of the Firebird:
 

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And:
 

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Beautiful. :)

Actually this aircraft is particularly good looking.

The first photo makes me wonder whether the cockpit is pressurized. I would have assumed not for an OPV but the light refraction suggests thick transparencies... ???

--Luc
 
don't forget NG's Firebird datasheet
http://www.as.northropgrumman.com/products/firebird/assets/data_sheet_Firebird.pdf
 
Machdiamond said:
The first photo makes me wonder whether the cockpit is pressurized.

Given the altitude of "Up to 30,000 ft (9.1 km)" given in the specs sheet (thanks, flateric!) I think the answer to this one is now pretty obvious...
 
I don't agree that it is obvious. The weight penalty of pressurisation is substantial, and if there are no pilot an board it is a lot of dead weight to carry around.

When the pilot is there, it can limit itself to 25000ft and there are airplanes certified to that altitude that are not pressurized.

Anybody knows what optional HFE stands for as powerplant option in the specs?

--Luc
 
HFE stands for Heavy Fuel Engine, so far as I know.
 
Machdiamond said:
I don't agree that it is obvious. The weight penalty of pressurisation is substantial, and if there are no pilot an board it is a lot of dead weight to carry around.
When the pilot is there, it can limit itself to 25000ft and there are airplanes certified to that altitude that are not pressurized.

True. There can be an altitude when operated as a UAS that would be different from when it is operated as a piloted aircraft. Makes sense.
 
You're probably right about HFE. Maybe the 300-400Hp diesel project at DeltaHawk.

I was thinking more about this pressurization thing. It would be a good choice where the unmanned variant is not necessarily the baseline mode of operation. So they still have a market for the aircraft where the customer does not want to deal with the cost and complexity of remote/autonomous operation.

--Luc
 
Machdiamond said:
I was thinking more about this pressurization thing. It would be a good choice where the unmanned variant is not necessarily the baseline mode of operation. So they still have a market for the aircraft where the customer does not want to deal with the cost and complexity of remote/autonomous operation.

Sounds logical.
 
I believe it doesn't have a pressurized cockpit, not even partially. Having a reciprocating engine and not a jet where air-bleed could provide pressure easily, pressurizing the cockpit would have been a complicated task. For "up to" 30.000ft the oxygen mask of the pilot should be sufficient and as mentioned already most times and when it will required to fly for a long time at high altitude the Firebird should be unmanned.

Also, this is just a prototype, for example Model 115 and Starship had significant differences, Model 309 and Adam M-309 likewise. The HFE is stated as an option but that may require a lot of further development and a production version could have a lot of changes.
 
robotpig said:
for example Model 115 and Starship had significant differences, Model 309 and Adam M-309 likewise.

Adam M-309 was the other name of the Scaled Composites Model 309.
The difference was actually between the Adam M-309 and the Adam A500... ;)
 
robotpig said:
...pressurizing the cockpit would have been a complicated task.

No it is very easy, you bleed from the turbo. Like the Lancair Evolution that is using the same engine as the Firebird, and many other pressurized airplanes (Malibu Mirage, Baron 58P, Cessna P210, etc.).

--Luc
 
Machdiamond said:
robotpig said:
...pressurizing the cockpit would have been a complicated task.

No it is very easy, you bleed from the turbo. Like the Lancair Evolution that is using the same engine as the Firebird, and many other pressurized airplanes (Malibu Mirage, Baron 58P, Cessna P210, etc.).

--Luc

Well you are both right to an extent. Getting the air to pressurize it is not hard, and yes it comes from the turbo, However you are also turning the cockpit/fuselage into a pressure vessel, and that is where it gets more complicated and as mentioned, you have definite weight penalties compared to a non-pressurized one . There are quite a few more design considerations to worry about, when you are trying to get it to not leak out air, but you have ducts, wiring, cables, controls, etc to run through the cockpit.
 
Stargazer2006 said:
Adam M-309 was the other name of the Scaled Composites Model 309.
The difference was actually between the Adam M-309 and the Adam A500... ;)

You are exactly right, my mistake. ::)

Luc & firepilot you have very valid points, I mostly believe (and of course I may be wrong) that considering its role and the fact that the pilot is equipped with oxygen mask (attachment) I found it very unlikely to also have a pressurized cabin.
 

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As I said I was really not expecting the first prototype to be pressurized.

My only observation is that the Firebird appears to have thick transparencies to handle it, hence my surprise.

Also, did you notice it does not have a door for the pilot, the entire top half of the cockpit must be removed for access. Would be interesting to see a photo of that. And what about emergency egress. Inquiring minds want to know ;D.

--Luc
 
It has only one door on the left side, the top half of the cockpit is fixed. Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jw2513/5625811648/
 

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