Textron Unveils Light Attack Scorpion

asianobserve

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Sep. 16, 2013 - 03:29PM | By AARON MEHTA
DEFENSE NEWS
Textron unveils light attack Scorpion | Defense News | defensenews.com





NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. — Textron and AirLand today unveiled the Scorpion, a clean-sheet light attack platform that the companies are confident can make inroads in both the international and domestic markets.

The plane is in the "final stages" of integration tests, with a flight expected before the end of the year, Scott Donnelly, chairman and CEO of Textron, told reporters today. He said the aircraft has already run successful tests of the ejector seat and engines.

Company officials unveiled the design, in works since January 2012 at a Wichita, Kan., facility, during the annual Air Force Association Air & Space Conference in National Harbor, Md.

The Scorpion comes with twin turbofan engines and a tandem cockpit, although the jet is designed to be flown by a single pilot. There are six hard points on the plane that could hold a variety of equipment, from extra fuel to Hellfire missiles.

Potential competitors to the Scorpion, such as the Embraer Super Tucano and Beechcraft AT-6, are turboprop designs notable for their low-cost design. Donnelly, however, expressed confidence that his design would be priced similarly to a turboprop, while providing greater capabilities.

Donnelly expects a per-hour operating cost of around $3,000, significantly less than highly capable aircraft such as the F-16 or F-35.

The backing officials see the ISR capabilities as what really sets the plane apart. The Scorpion can carry 3,000 pounds of ISR equipment, with a modular design to allow customers to select what equipment should be on the plane. It boasts five hours of long-loiter time as well.

While the company has had conversations with potential customers, it was not willing to identify any specific areas of growth. However, both the Middle East and the Pacific have proven fertile grounds for light attack craft in the past.

Given budget cuts around the world, it seems potentially dangerous for a company to create a new plane without a requirement. But Donnelly insists that gives his group an entrance into the worldwide market.

"Our view has always been that we know the US and partner nations are all going to have budgetary challenges, but that doesn't mean there isn't a mission requirement," he said. "We're offering a solution to people who have budgetary challenge and still have mission requirements. This is not a competitor to an F-35. The vast majority of missions don't need that."

Domestically, the Scorpion team is also keeping an eye on the Air Force's T-X trainer replacement program. Donnelly indicated that by swapping the two engines with a single engine and changing the wings on the plane, the fighter would match up ideally with the expected requirements for the T-X program, potentially worth billions of dollars.

That kind of design flexibility will be key for making market headway, said former Air Force Secretary Whit Peters, who consulted for AirLand on the design of the plane.

"For the international market, its' critical," Peters said of the flexibility of the plane. Because its can be hard to know what technologies will and will not be exportable, it is important to be able to make a baseline airplane that can be exportable and then modified for customers, Peters said.

He indicated that worldwide fleets of A-37s, as well as the US Air Force's fleets of A-10s and F-15Cs, could be platforms replaced by the Scorpion. Both those Air Force platforms are potentially on the cutting block due to sequestration.










 
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drkrn

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why are the pilot seats coming out breaking the glass??why did the rear pilot come out first.any logical reason?
 

Decklander

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why are the pilot seats coming out breaking the glass??why did the rear pilot come out first.any logical reason?
The rear pilot ejects first so that a safe separation can be maintained between the two and both pilots eject in diff dirxns for this very reason. have a look again. one pilot ejects to left and second to right.
 

hitesh

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The Canopy is expected to eject first then the pilots ejects ,in the video the pilots are ejecting while breaking the canopy that's absurd ,in actual fighter ,the canopy glass is almost bullet proof .....
 

asianobserve

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WHat I'm curious about is how to maintain the engines. SInce it seems that the engine is buried in the midsection of the aircraft, does it mean that the whole tail is detached if you want to remove an engine?
 

arnabmit

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Doesn't it look like an American Su-25?
 

Decklander

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The Canopy is expected to eject first then the pilots ejects ,in the video the pilots are ejecting while breaking the canopy that's absurd ,in actual fighter ,the canopy glass is almost bullet proof .....
The ejection seat has two canopy shatterring prongs on top in case canopy is not ejected/crushed by canopy explosive chord system. We have an explosive chord woven into the canopy which has also been shown working in one of the attached videos. A demonstration of ejection is done by assuming failure of this canopy shattering explosive chord. My first ejection from IN-057 Kiran was thru canopy. I was so low that I did not have time to jettision the canopy so ejected thru it.
 

arnabmit

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@Decklander

OT

I don't understand much about aircrafts...

For Tejas to be converted to a "low and slow" dedicated CAS platform for export, would the K9 suffice? Or would it need 2 K9 turbofans? Is the airframe suitable for such a role?
 
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Decklander

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@Decklander

OT

I don't understand much about aircrafts...

For Tejas to be converted to a "low and slow" dedicated CAS platform for export, would the K9 suffice? Or would it need 2 K9 turbofans? Is the airframe suitable for such a role?
CAS is where you lose max amount of aircraft. Those infantry guys whom you try to intimidate actually stand up and fire at you from even their side arms. A CAS ac must have very good armour plates to survive those bullets and should be capable of taking huge punishment. LCA is made of largely composites which have poor tolerance to bullets and can't be repaired as easily as aluminum skins.
For CAS you need slow speed, high persistance, damage tolerant aircraft and LCA is certainly not one of them. Engine has little play in this role.
 
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datguy79

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That thing is going to replace an A-10? lol

Super Tucano hourly operational cost is around 500-700 bucks. How is an hourly operational cost of $3000 going to compete with that? If a country can afford that, might as well go for more established fighters.
 

W.G.Ewald

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FM 44-8 Chapter 5

5-5. Small arms used in air defense incorporate the use of volume fire and proper aiming points according to the target. If your soldiers are trained to apply an appropriate sequence of engagement techniques for aircraft based on the rules for selecting an aiming point, the response will be automatic upon command. You will have effective air defense using the small arms available to your unit.
 

cobra commando

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Textron offers Scorpion jet to IAF

February 09, 2015: The Indian Air Force, which receives pitches both solicited and unsolicited, has received one of its most interesting in recent times. Faced with a training void in the intermediate jet trainer space, the IAF had resorted to a global request for information to gauge what solutions existed in the world aviation market for a light jet trainer platform that could also undertake light attack and tactical multipurpose missions. One of the responses the IAF has received is an aircraft that has evoked attention for its simplicity, cost and mission profile: the Textron Airland Scorpion, a light tactical twin-jet airplane fitted out for tactical interdiction missions and ISR. Whether or not the IAF is willing to look strictly at aircraft that don't fit its rather unbending trainer aircraft profile, the Scorpion is an intriguing platform that makes affordability its singular touchstone. First off, the Scorpion isn't intended as a high performance airplane -- and isn't under development through a US Department of Defense-funded programme or requirement, but rather a venture by Textron and Airland LLC based on their own independent understanding of the world market for aircraft, and evolving requirements. Shrinking budgets, the unaffordability of high performance fighter jets, logistical economics and the spending power of small or emerging nations with security threat perspectives largely guide the development of a light, uncomplicated aircraft that can, in the words of the maker, engage in domestic interdiction, quick- reaction natural disaster support, air sovereignty patrols, and low- threat battlefield missions.


Read more:
Textron offers Scorpion jet to IAF - SP’s Exculsive
 

sgarg

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Textron offers Scorpion jet to IAF

February 09, 2015: The Indian Air Force, which receives pitches both solicited and unsolicited, has received one of its most interesting in recent times. Faced with a training void in the intermediate jet trainer space, the IAF had resorted to a global request for information to gauge what solutions existed in the world aviation market for a light jet trainer platform that could also undertake light attack and tactical multipurpose missions. One of the responses the IAF has received is an aircraft that has evoked attention for its simplicity, cost and mission profile: the Textron Airland Scorpion, a light tactical twin-jet airplane fitted out for tactical interdiction missions and ISR. Whether or not the IAF is willing to look strictly at aircraft that don't fit its rather unbending trainer aircraft profile, the Scorpion is an intriguing platform that makes affordability its singular touchstone. First off, the Scorpion isn't intended as a high performance airplane -- and isn't under development through a US Department of Defense-funded programme or requirement, but rather a venture by Textron and Airland LLC based on their own independent understanding of the world market for aircraft, and evolving requirements. Shrinking budgets, the unaffordability of high performance fighter jets, logistical economics and the spending power of small or emerging nations with security threat perspectives largely guide the development of a light, uncomplicated aircraft that can, in the words of the maker, engage in domestic interdiction, quick- reaction natural disaster support, air sovereignty patrols, and low- threat battlefield missions.


Read more:
Textron offers Scorpion jet to IAF - SP�s Exculsive
Good aircraft but unsuitable for Indian needs.
Any Indian ground attack aircraft needs to have strong defensive suite as opposition are regular heavily armed forces.
 

SajeevJino

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More on Scorpion for IAF


the IAF has shown keen interest in Scorpion jet plane, jointly developed by Textron and AirLand Enterprises. The Sitara IJT is under development since 1997. Powered by two Honeywell engines with missile hardpoints, the two seater sub-sonic Scorpion not only fits the IJT role but can also be used for intelligence, reconnaissance and surveillance in war. The plane, which has been inducted into US Air Force, has a composite body with operating cost as low as $3,000 per hour compared to over $18,000 per hour for fourth generation US fighters. "If India agrees to bring Scorpion under DTTI, then the company has plans to set up a manufacturing facility in the country," said a Delhi-based American diplomat.
US defence secretary's maiden India trip to focus on key deals
 

SajeevJino

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damn :wtf: Payload, for the same cost of some 100 piece we can redesign the MK 2 by increased Range and adding Terrain hugging character, which can outperform the Scorpion in each and every Aspects








Tejas has more payload less Range ie only 500 kilometers (my predictions), But Scorpion good in low flying Missions and Good Range, but less payload.


Scorpion :gtfo:
 

Kunal Biswas

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If IAF decides to buy this Aircraft, It is best they drop Rafale deal as well as more MKIs ..

As it shows IAF lack understanding of Multirole concept which is now 30 years old ..
 

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