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Old January 22nd 07, 01:36 PM posted to rec.aviation.military,us.military.army,sci.military.naval,rec.aviation.military.naval
Vince
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Default "V-22 DESERT TESTING FINDS PROBLEMS THAT HURT MISSION EFFECTIVENESS"

Mike wrote:
Inside the Navy
January 22, 2007

DOT&E Report Outlines Concerns

V-22 DESERT TESTING FINDS PROBLEMS THAT HURT MISSION EFFECTIVENESS


Big surprise
it's the same flying turkey it always was


The V-22 Osprey, which may deploy to Iraq with Marines this year,
suffered problems that hurt its mission effectiveness when the Air
Force tested it for a month in the New Mexico desert, according to a
new report from the Pentagonšs top weapons tester.

The problems are described in the latest annual report from the Defense
Departmentšs operational testing directorate, led by Charles McQueary.

The V-22 is a helicopter-plane hybrid developed by Bell Helicopter
Textron and Boeing. During an "operational utility evaluation"
conducted last summer in the desert at Kirtland Air Force Base, NM, the
effectiveness of the Osprey for training missions and potential combat
missions was "degraded by poor aircraft availability", says the report,
issued January 18.

"Frequent part and system failures, limited supply support, and high
false alarm rates in the built-in diagnostic systems caused frequent
flight delays and an excessive maintenance workload", the report says.

Some of the reliability problems "may be attributable to the extended
exposure to the desert operating environment" where the assessment
occurred, says the report.


a month in the desert


The Osprey provided only "marginal operational availability" during the
41 flights (74 flight hours), the report says.


74 hours in 24 days by 4 aircraft
that is less than an hour a day per aircraft.

wow an hour a day must have really been tough on the aircraft

The Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation Center conducted the
assessment using four of the servicešs CV-22 aircraft. The testing
started June 6, 2006, and wrapped up July 10, said Katherine Gandara, a
spokeswoman for the center. The final test flight for the assessment
was conducted June 30, she said. All of the testing took place in the
desert, she said.

snip

Darcy said the testing in New Mexico was originally intended to test
the Air Forcešs rigorous training curriculum. This was a "much more
stressful evaluation" compared to the conditions and types of flights
that the V-22 program anticipates on an actual deployment, he said.

But Philip Coyle, a former director of operational testing and
evaluation at the Pentagon, and now a senior adviser with the Center
for Defense Information, said it is amazing how many reliability
problems continue to affect the V-22.

"This produces a maintenance and support burden that the Marines really
canšt afford", he said. "All of the reliability problems that they
continue to have here in the [United] States -- itšs going to drive
them crazy overseas."


Yeh but the brass really wants this overpriced over weight under sized
turkey since it flies much faster than a donkey or a camel

Vince