Northrop
Whale
Program: BSAX
USAF/DARPA designation: YF-117D
'Tacit Blue'
Engines: 2 x 5440 lbf. thrust high-bypass Garrett
ATF3-6 turbofans
First flight: February 1982
In early April 1976, Lockheed received word that it had officially won Phase
I of the XST competition. However, DARPA urged the Northrop team to remain
together, and shortly thereafter
it successfully submitted studies for a Battlefield Surveillance
Aircraft,
Experimental
(BSAX)
which
was to evolve
into
a highly-successful flight demonstration
programme that provided vital data
for the subsequent B-2 bomber.
The USAF, DARPA and Northrop teamed up for the TACIT BLUE Technology
Demonstration Program from 1978 to 1985. The prototype validated a number of
innovative stealth technology advances. Most notably, it was the first aircraft
to demonstrate a low radar cross section using curved surfaces, along with
a low probability of intercept radar and data link. TACIT BLUE initially was
created to demonstrate that a low observable surveillance aircraft with a low
probability of intercept radar and other sensors could operate close to the
forward line of battle with a high degree of survivability. Such an aircraft
could continuously monitor the ground situation behind the battlefield and
provide targeting information in real-time to a ground command center.
The TACIT BLUE prototype (the real name of the plane, if any, has never been
revealed) featured a straight, tapered wing with a "Vee" tail mounted
on an oversized fuselage
with
a curved
shape.
It
had a
wingspan
of
48.2 feet
and
a length of 55.8 feet and weighed 30,000 pounds. A single flush inlet on the
top of the fuselage provided air to two high-bypass turbofan engines. Flight
control was supplied by a quadruply-redundant, digital fly-by-wire flight system
that
stabilized
the aircraft about the longitudinal and directional
axes.
TACIT BLUE owed some
of its unique shape and size to the reconnaissance equipment it was designed
to carry. A Hughes multi-mode-side-looking radar (SLAR) a predecessor to the
ground surveillance radar used in Joint Stars, took up a large part of SHAMU's
structure. The SLAR on TACIT BLUE was part of an effort to test if a LPI (low
probability of intercept) radar could be flown on a stealth aircraft without
compromising its presence. ELINT (Electronic Intelligence) antennas for intercepting
enemy communications were also part of TACIT BLUE's reconnaissance systems.
TACIT BLUE was developed as a potential platform for radar sensors developed
under the Air Force Pave Mover and Army SOTAS programs. In 1982, the Undersecretary
of Defense for Research and Engineering (USDRE) combined the SOTAS and Pave
Mover efforts into a joint program, later designated Joint STARS. From 1982-1984,
the services, OSD, and Congress wrestled over the development of requirements
for the joint program, as well as the appropriate platform for the sensor.
At the time, one option under active consideration was a two-phased program
in which the radar would initially be deployed on ten conventional aircraft,
with subsequent production focused on a stealth platform derived from the TACIT
BLUE test aircraft. In May 1984, the Chiefs of Staff of the Air Force and Army
made the final decision to put the Joint STARS radar on a 707 platform.
TACIT BLUE was one of the most successful technology demonstrator programs
in Air Force history, meeting all program objectives and most low observable
and sensor performance goals. The aircraft made its first flight in February
1982, and subsequently logged 135 hours of flight over a three-year period.
The aircraft often achieved three to four flights weekly and several times
flew more than once a day.
There were
a total of five pilots who flew the aircraft. The first was Dick Thomas,
a Northop
test pilot. The air Force pilots were Lieutenant Colonel
Ken Dyson (who was also a HAVE BLUE pilot) and Lieutenant Colonels, Wes Easter,
Don Cornell and Major Dan Vanderhurst. The program cost approximately $165
million and covered development, construction and flight test. As the prime
contractor, Northrop received a $136 million contract to provide one complete
technology demonstrator and a partially-developed back-up airframe. TACIT
BLUE never went into production but yielded valuable engineering data that
aided
in the B-2 Spirit design. It also served as a basis for several UAVs and
especially the later cancelled M-137 TSSAM tri-service weapon.
The TACIT BLUE prototype was finally declassified and unveiled to the public
on April 30, 1996, at the Pentagon. It was then sent to the Wright-Patterson
Air Force
Museum,
where
it was first exhibited underneath
the XB-70 'Valkyrie', and now below Boeing's "Bird of Prey".
Population: 1
Specs:
Length: 55.8 ft. (17.0 m)
Wingspan: 48.2 ft. (14.69 m)
Height: 10.6 ft. (3.23 m)
Start mass: 13,500 kg
Loaded weight: 30,000 lbs. (13,606 kg)
Maximum speed: 287 mph (462 km/h)
Service ceiling: 30,000 ft (9,144 m)
Thrust-to-weight: 0.36 lbf/lb (3.6 N/kg)
Crew/passengers: one
pilot
|