Northrop Grumman MQ-8 Fire Scout - Operational History

Operational History

In January 2006, an RQ-8A Fire Scout landed aboard the U.S. Navy warship USS Nashville while it was steaming off the coast of Maryland near the Patuxent River. This marked the first time an unmanned helicopter has landed autonomously aboard a moving U.S. Navy ship without a pilot controlling the aircraft. The USS Nashville, which is an amphibious transport ship, was maneuvering as fast as 17 mph (27 km/h) in the tests.

The flight test program is underway. Production aircraft will eventually be deployed on the Navy's Littoral Combat Ships. In February 2008, the U.S. Navy announced that they would integrate the MQ-8B Fire Scout VTUAV onto another air-capable ship before it reaches the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS).

The Fire Scout is a key enabler for LCS and significantly contributes to its designated warfare mission areas of anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare and mine warfare. The modular nature of the ship to accomplish the designated mission is complemented by the Fire Scout and its modular mission payload capability. However, due to changes in the LCS development schedule, the Navy conducted the Fire Scout Operational Evaluation (OpEval) aboard USS McInerney (FFG-8). This will provide the fleet with unmanned aerial system support as soon as possible. The Fire Scout first embarked aboard the guided-missile frigate USS McInerney, an Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate, while in port for operational fit checks and ship integration testing on December 10, 2008. The Fire Scout was slated to deploy aboard USS McInerney during its next counter-narcotics trafficking deployment later in 2009.

According to the current schedule, the Navy conducted Technical Evaluation on the Fire Scout on the FFG-8 in the fall 2008 and Operational Evaluation in the summer 2009. The Fire Scout was to reach Initial Operating Capability soon after the evaluation. The Navy will continue to support LCS Initial Operational Test and Evaluation (IOT&E) efforts in fiscal year 2011.

Flight tests took place 4–8 May 2009 off the coast of Mayport, Fla. The U.S. Navy Fire Scout completed test flights in areas of shipboard deck motion and wind envelope expansion and landings including the use of the grid and harpoon system. During the five days of testing, the ship/aircraft team compiled 19 flight hours during 12 flights, which included 54 landings, 37 of which were into the NATO standard grid.

In September 2009, the Navy announced the first deployment of the MQ-8B aboard McInerney.

On 3 April 2010, an MQ-8 from McInerney detected a "go-fast" open speedboat and a support vessel engaged in smuggling cocaine in the Eastern Pacific, allowing the ship to confiscate 60 kg of cocaine and detain a number of suspects. On 2 August 2010 an MQ-8 became unresponsive to commands during testing and entered restricted airspace around Washington, D.C.

In May 2011, three MQ-8s were deployed to northern Afghanistan for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), a mission which has been extended another year.

On 21 June 2011, a MQ-8 operating from USS Halyburton (FFG-40) as part of Operation Unified Protector was shot down over Libya during a surveillance and reconnaissance mission. Aboard the Halyburton, the Fire Scouts were flown and maintained by the ship's SH-60 detachment, HSL-42.

The U.S. Navy briefly grounded the MQ-8B Fire Scout after two of the aircraft crashed overseas within a week. In the first incident, the Navy said a Fire Scout crashed off the coast of Africa on 30 March after it was unable to land on the US Navy Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate USS Simpson (FFG-56) at the end of a surveillance mission. On 6 April 2012, another Fire Scout crashed in Afghanistan. An investigation into the crash in Afghanistan determined the cause was a faulty navigation system. The cause of the crash near the USS Simpson (FFG-56) remains less clear, so the result was tougher maintenance procedures put in place to prevent a faulty copter from going on-mission. The Fire Scout was back flying over Afghanistan by May, and returned to sea-based ISR "anti-piracy" operations by August.

The U.S. Navy has continued to deploy the MQ-8B to the African AOR with deployments in USS Klakring (FFG 42) and USS Robert G. Bradley (FFG 49). In each of the deployments the UAV has exceeded 500 flight hours, while providing critical ISR coverage for AFRICOM and 6th Fleet.

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