Wright-Patt experiment narrows test planes
Two aircraft continue on in exercise overseen by Air Force base office.
An Air Force experiment that pitted four light attack planes against one another over the skies of New Mexico has narrowed to two.
WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE
An Air Force experiment BASE — that pitted four light attack planes against one another over the skies of New Mexico has narrowed to two, the service branch said.
The Textron AT-6 Wolverine and the Sierra Nevada Corp. and Embraer Defense & Security’s A-29 Super Tuscano, both propeller-driven aircraft, will fly at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., between May and July this year.
The Air Force Strategic Development Planning and Experimentation Office at Wright-Patterson is overseeing the $6 million experiment.
Textron AirLand’s Scorpion jet and L3’s and Air Tractor’s AT-802L Longsword also had been evaluated last summer at Holloman Air Force Base, N.M., but will not be part of the next stage of the evaluation, the Air Force said.
Plans to test the planes in combat during the experiment were dropped. “At this time, we believe we have the right information to move forward with light attack, without conducting a combat demonstration,” Capt. Emily
Grabowski, an Air Force spokeswoman, said in an email to this news outlet.
The experiments were meant to determine the cost to buy, operate and maintain the plane, if it can be mass produced quickly, and exported to other countries.
“Will the U.S.A.F. get any?” asked Richard Aboulafia, an aviation analyst with Virginia-based Teal Group. “It would make the U.S. unique, as a wealthy country operating a plane commonly found in countries where the threats are as low as the budgets. You can’t rule that out. On the other hand, not including a combat testing phase seems to indicate a relatively low priority for this.”
The Air Force has searched for a low-cost alternative to flying expensive fighter and attack aircraft in lower threat environments for a potential buy in the future.
“If all we’re doing is making circles in the air and waiting for a call to drop weapons, you won’t have to do it at tens of thousands of dollars per hour operating costs,” Ravi Penmetsa, a Wright-Patterson-based project official, said in an interview last year.
In the next step of the experiment, the Air Force will evaluate maintenance and logistics demands, weapons and sensors, training scenarios, and ability to operate jointly with other countries, among a list of test goals.
Contact this reporter at 937-225-2363 or email Barrie.Barber@coxinc.com.