Six months after signing the Long Endurance Multi-Intelligence Vehicle (LEMV) agreement with the Army to build three airships with 21-day persistent intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) capability, Northrop Grumman‘s [NOC] LEMV program team has completed its Critical Design Review (CDR).
This is the fourth major milestone achieved by the program since contract award (Defense Daily, Nov. 5).
“The entire U.S. Army/Northrop Grumman LEMV industry team has done an outstanding job working through a very aggressive development schedule to achieve all of these important milestones,” said Alan Metzger, Northrop Grumman vice president and integrated program team leader of LEMV and airship programs. “The CDR provided an in-depth review of the complete system design of the program giving us the opportunity to assess where we are in our development and air vehicle production…”We’ll have hull inflation in the spring and first flight of the airship test article by mid-to-late summer. Upon completion of the development ground and flight testing phase, we expect to transition to a government facility and conduct our final acceptance long endurance flight just before year’s end. In early 2012, LEMV will participate in an Army Joint Military Utility Assessment in an operational environment.”
Under the more than $500 million June 2010 agreement, awarded by the Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command, Northrop Grumman will design, develop and test a long-duration hybrid airship system all within an 18-month time period (Defense Daily, June 16).
“The power of the LEMV system is that its persistent surveillance capability is built around Northrop Grumman’s open architecture design, which provides plug-and-play payload capability to the warfighter and room for mission growth,” Metzger said. “The system rapidly accommodates next-generation sensors as emerging field requirements dictate and will provide increased operational utility to battlefield commanders. Today, our system readily integrates into the Army’s existing Universal Ground Control Station and Deployable Common Ground System command centers and ground troops in forward operating bases.
“Beyond the value of seamless interoperability, the LEMV system provides a high level of fuel efficiency to the user community–a crucial part of life cycle logistics and support in theater. While LEMV is longer than a football field and taller than a seven-story building, it utilizes approximately 3,500 gallons of fuel for the air vehicle to remain aloft for a 21-day period of service, that’s approximately $11,000 at commercial prices,” Metzger said.
Northrop Grumman’s industry team includes Hybrid Air Vehicles Ltd. of the United Kingdom, Warwick Mills, ILC Dover, AAI Corp. [TXT], SAIC [SAI]and a team of technology leaders from 18 U.S. states and three countries. In addition to leading the program, Northrop Grumman leads the system integration, and flight and ground control operations for the unmanned vehicle to safely take off and land in worldwide operations.