The Fire Scout VTUAV system operates from Navy ships to perform intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. It can carry modular payloads like electro-optical/infrared sensors, radar, and communications equipment. The Fire Scout provides over-the-horizon targeting data to ships and supports missions like anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare, and mine warfare from the Littoral Combat Ship. It has an endurance of over 8 hours and can relay communications between forces.
The Fire Scout VTUAV system operates from Navy ships to perform intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. It can carry modular payloads like electro-optical/infrared sensors, radar, and communications equipment. The Fire Scout provides over-the-horizon targeting data to ships and supports missions like anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare, and mine warfare from the Littoral Combat Ship. It has an endurance of over 8 hours and can relay communications between forces.
The Fire Scout VTUAV system operates from Navy ships to perform intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. It can carry modular payloads like electro-optical/infrared sensors, radar, and communications equipment. The Fire Scout provides over-the-horizon targeting data to ships and supports missions like anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare, and mine warfare from the Littoral Combat Ship. It has an endurance of over 8 hours and can relay communications between forces.
The Fire Scout VTUAV system operates from Navy ships to perform intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. It can carry modular payloads like electro-optical/infrared sensors, radar, and communications equipment. The Fire Scout provides over-the-horizon targeting data to ships and supports missions like anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare, and mine warfare from the Littoral Combat Ship. It has an endurance of over 8 hours and can relay communications between forces.
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Operational Scenario
The Fire Scout VTUAV system is capable of
operating from any air-capable Navy ship and will be primarily based aboard the Navys newest surface combatant, the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS). Fire Scout is a critical contributor to the ships three primary missions: Anti-Submarine Warfare, Surface Warfare, and Mine Warfare. Operational concepts allow for the Fire Scout to transition through multiple roles while it provides support throughout the Joint Battle Space. Through rapid reconguration facilitated by modular payload architecture and dened interface specications, Fire Scout is able to adapt to the mission at hand and provide real time ISR/T to the operational commander. Fire Scout is the perfect asset to detect and engage swarming boats, ensure landing areas are clear for amphibious craft, provide overhead communications relay, and conduct intelligence gathering and targeting on relocatable targets. As battleeld preparation continues and enemy forces are engaged, the Fire Scout can provide Over-the-Horizon (OTH) targeting for U.S.Navy ship-launched weapons or land-based artillery to strike targets that are well beyond normal Line- of-Sight (LOS) sensors. Fire Scout missions will be expanded through spiral development of requirements and capabilities. These would include maritime surveillance radar, signals and communications intelligence gathering, magnetic anomaly detectors, and satellite communications. The Fire Scout VTUAV will provide additional capabilities as it increases the number of payloads employed and will allow the operational commander to dramatically augment his situational awareness and responsiveness. AEROSPACE SYSTEMS STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION MQ-8B FIRE SCOUT Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System MQ-8B Fire Scout Air Vehicle Specications United States Navy Air Vehicle Fuselage Length (with Dual Payload Nose): 23.95 ft (7.3 m) Fuselage Width: 6.20 ft (1.9 m) Length (with Blades Folded Forward): 30.03 ft (9.2 m) Rotor Diameter: 27.50 ft (8.4 m) Height (Top of Tail Antenna): 9.71 ft (2.9 m) Gross Weight: 3,150 lbs (1428.8 kg) Engine: Rolls Royce 250-C20W Turboshaft Engine Speed: 115+ Knots Ceiling: 20,000 ft (6.1 km) Endurance Total Flight Time with Baseline Payload: 8+ Hours Total Flight Time with EO/IR + Radar: 7+ Hours Total Flight Time with Maximum Payload: 5+ Hours Payloads 23.95 ft 9.71 ft 7.85 ft 13.75 ft P.O. Box 509066 San Diego California 92150-9066 www.northropgrumman.com/unmanned Contact Info: Joe Fleming (858) 618-6737 Email: joseph.feming@ngc.com Approved for Public Release Distribution Unlimited NAVAIR 09-413 Dated 8 February 2010 Revised Cover: NAVAIR 10-604 Dated 28 April 2010 VM00-AS-4873_02_13 NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION Star SAFIRE III EO/IR/LRF U.S. Navy Baseline EO/IR/LRF Mine Detector UHF/VHF Comm Relay Maritime Radar Ready to Deliver The MQ-8B Fire Scout provides an unprecedented ability to detect, identify, and target tactical threats at sea or ashore. Fire Scouts ability to y multiple payloads such as radar and electro-optical/infrared sensors allows downlink of broad area surveillance and target-specic full motion video to decision makers. Fire Scout provides continuous situational awareness and proven reliability, exibility, and maintainability. Already on contract with the U.S. Navy, Fire Scout will dramatically expand capacity to gather intelligence and act with devastating speed. Northrop Grummans Transformational Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle system provides unprecedented situation awareness and precision targeting support for U.S. Armed Forces of the future. The MQ-8B Fire Scout has the ability to autonomously take off and land on any aviation-capable warship and at prepared and unprepared landing zones in proximity to the soldier in contact. The Northrop Grumman VTUAV system is based on a highly reliable civilian Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) helicopter. The advanced ground control facilities encompass the U.S. Navys Tactical Control System (TCS) software developed for Navy ships, tactical data links and communications relay capability. A modular mission payload allows continued growth for new sensors. With a total vehicle endurance greater than eight hours, the Fire Scout is capable of continuous operations, providing coverage 110 nm (200 km) from the launch site. Using a baseline payload that includes electro- optical/infrared sensors (EO/IR) and a laser range nder/illuminator, the Fire Scout system can nd, identify, track and illuminate targets, provide accurate targeting data to strike platforms, and perform battle damage assessment. Acting as a communications node within the Joint C4ISR architecture, Fire Scout will increase the effectiveness and exibility of other platforms. The Navy program is managed by the U.S. Navys PMA-266 Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Program Ofce at Patuxent River, Maryland. Fully Autonomous Operations No pilot in the loop required for launch or recovery Manual override capability In fight mission plan update capability Light Harpoon restraint system Expanded fight envelope Minimal impact on host ship operations Minimal support personnel requirements System Requirements Autonomous operations from all air-capable ships >8 hours continuous system on station coverage Ceiling and airspeed: 20,000 ft, 115+ kts >5 hours on station time (single vehicle) at 110 nm Interoperability through Tactical Control System (TCS) software and STANAG 4586 Compliance Payload Features Modular Mission Payloads (MMP) Plug and play product Baseline MMP capability EO/IR laser range nder illuminator Voice/data communication relay 600 pound payload lift capacity Growth payloads Tactical Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR/MTI), Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS), Trafc Collision Avoidance System (TCAS), SATCOM, Sonobuoy delivery, expendables employment, threat countermeasures, mine detection, etc... The Fire Scout System (STANAG Compliant) provides fully autonomous operation of the air vehicle and payload with the exibility of a wide variety of override commands available to the operators through the Control System (CS). The CS also displays payload imagery, air vehicle status and situational information to the operators. Payload information can be disseminated via the C4I architecture to GCCS-M and other C4I nodes. All data is available through the signal entry panel, including RS-170, RGB, Fiber Optics, Ethernet, ATM, FDDI and Fiber Optic Ethernet. The CS houses an air vehicle operator (AVO), a mission payload operator (MPO) and a mission commander (MC). The Control System for Fire Scout in the Navy is integrated into the Integrated Communication Center (ICC) aboard Littoral Combat Ship. There are also versions of this system that are constructed to be contained in a roll on/roll off shelter or mounted on a High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) for land-based and mobile operations. The CS has the ability to perform pre-mission planning for the air vehicle and payload. It can also upload new missions real-time and perform override control of both vehicle and payload. MQ-8B Fire Scout VTUAV Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System Supplying Organic Intelligence and Targeting Capability in the Littoral Battle Space Force Multiplier... The Fire Scout System allows for the full use of multiple onboard sensors and payloads for Over the Horizon Targeting, Communications Relay, Threat Detection, Intelligence Gathering, Precision Strike Support and real time Battle Damage Assessment. December 18, 2006 The MQ-8B Fire Scout successfully completes its rst ight at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, MD. During this test series, the vehicle executed its missions fully autonomously. The Fire Scout System enables U.S. Armed Forces operations to be conducted with seamless control from ships or from land-based control segments. Real-time data can be shared with Navy, Marines, Army, and Homeland Security Forces and targeting data can be provided to all Services potential shooters, reducing engagement timelines and minimizing their exposure to enemy re. Versatility Equals Capability Navy Manned-Unmanned Operations Command Information Center (CIC) Navy Control System (CS) UHF/VHF (3) Shielded Avionics Compartment Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (1) Flight Control Actuators Folding Rotors Fuel Tank UHF/VHF Antenna (2) UHF/VHF Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (2) Radar Altimeter Antenna (1) Radar Altimeter Antenna (2) Engine Intake Barrier Filter Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (2) Turboshaft Engine Light Harpoon Landing Restraint System Modular Mission Payload (EO/IR Laser Pointer and Range Finder) UCARS Antenna Meeting the Armed Forces System Needs Providing organic Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Targeting (ISR/T) capabilities Provides Over The Horizon (OTH) targeting Provides real-time Battle Damage Assessment Implements network centric warfare concepts with communications relay capability Defense IT Standard Registry/Joint Technical Architecture (DIST/JTA) compliant Fully interoperable between land and sea-based Tactical Control Systems Legacy of High Reliability Based on a Schweizer Aircraft commercial airframe with over 20 million ight hours, the Fire Scout vehicle incorporates reliable turbine power (160 million ight hours) using standard NATO heavy fuel. Leveraging from this FAA certied aircraft with commonality of over 50 percent of the mechanical parts, the servicing and logistical processes are well known, proven and documented. This low risk approach for the airframe allows effective maturation of the entire system within a short development schedule. UCARS Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Electro-Optical Image Infrared Image Ready to Deliver The MQ-8B Fire Scout provides an unprecedented ability to detect, identify, and target tactical threats at sea or ashore. Fire Scouts ability to y multiple payloads such as radar and electro-optical/infrared sensors allows downlink of broad area surveillance and target-specic full motion video to decision makers. Fire Scout provides continuous situational awareness and proven reliability, exibility, and maintainability. Already on contract with the U.S. Navy, Fire Scout will dramatically expand capacity to gather intelligence and act with devastating speed. Northrop Grummans Transformational Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle system provides unprecedented situation awareness and precision targeting support for U.S. Armed Forces of the future. The MQ-8B Fire Scout has the ability to autonomously take off and land on any aviation-capable warship and at prepared and unprepared landing zones in proximity to the soldier in contact. The Northrop Grumman VTUAV system is based on a highly reliable civilian Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) helicopter. The advanced ground control facilities encompass the U.S. Navys Tactical Control System (TCS) software developed for Navy ships, tactical data links and communications relay capability. A modular mission payload allows continued growth for new sensors. With a total vehicle endurance greater than eight hours, the Fire Scout is capable of continuous operations, providing coverage 110 nm (200 km) from the launch site. Using a baseline payload that includes electro- optical/infrared sensors (EO/IR) and a laser range nder/illuminator, the Fire Scout system can nd, identify, track and illuminate targets, provide accurate targeting data to strike platforms, and perform battle damage assessment. Acting as a communications node within the Joint C4ISR architecture, Fire Scout will increase the effectiveness and exibility of other platforms. The Navy program is managed by the U.S. Navys PMA-266 Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Program Ofce at Patuxent River, Maryland. Fully Autonomous Operations No pilot in the loop required for launch or recovery Manual override capability In fight mission plan update capability Light Harpoon restraint system Expanded fight envelope Minimal impact on host ship operations Minimal support personnel requirements System Requirements Autonomous operations from all air-capable ships >8 hours continuous system on station coverage Ceiling and airspeed: 20,000 ft, 115+ kts >5 hours on station time (single vehicle) at 110 nm Interoperability through Tactical Control System (TCS) software and STANAG 4586 Compliance Payload Features Modular Mission Payloads (MMP) Plug and play product Baseline MMP capability EO/IR laser range nder illuminator Voice/data communication relay 600 pound payload lift capacity Growth payloads Tactical Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR/MTI), Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS), Trafc Collision Avoidance System (TCAS), SATCOM, Sonobuoy delivery, expendables employment, threat countermeasures, mine detection, etc... The Fire Scout System (STANAG Compliant) provides fully autonomous operation of the air vehicle and payload with the exibility of a wide variety of override commands available to the operators through the Control System (CS). The CS also displays payload imagery, air vehicle status and situational information to the operators. Payload information can be disseminated via the C4I architecture to GCCS-M and other C4I nodes. All data is available through the signal entry panel, including RS-170, RGB, Fiber Optics, Ethernet, ATM, FDDI and Fiber Optic Ethernet. The CS houses an air vehicle operator (AVO), a mission payload operator (MPO) and a mission commander (MC). The Control System for Fire Scout in the Navy is integrated into the Integrated Communication Center (ICC) aboard Littoral Combat Ship. There are also versions of this system that are constructed to be contained in a roll on/roll off shelter or mounted on a High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) for land-based and mobile operations. The CS has the ability to perform pre-mission planning for the air vehicle and payload. It can also upload new missions real-time and perform override control of both vehicle and payload. MQ-8B Fire Scout VTUAV Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System Supplying Organic Intelligence and Targeting Capability in the Littoral Battle Space Force Multiplier... The Fire Scout System allows for the full use of multiple onboard sensors and payloads for Over the Horizon Targeting, Communications Relay, Threat Detection, Intelligence Gathering, Precision Strike Support and real time Battle Damage Assessment. December 18, 2006 The MQ-8B Fire Scout successfully completes its rst ight at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, MD. During this test series, the vehicle executed its missions fully autonomously. The Fire Scout System enables U.S. Armed Forces operations to be conducted with seamless control from ships or from land-based control segments. Real-time data can be shared with Navy, Marines, Army, and Homeland Security Forces and targeting data can be provided to all Services potential shooters, reducing engagement timelines and minimizing their exposure to enemy re. Versatility Equals Capability Navy Manned-Unmanned Operations Command Information Center (CIC) Navy Control System (CS) UHF/VHF (3) Shielded Avionics Compartment Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (1) Flight Control Actuators Folding Rotors Fuel Tank UHF/VHF Antenna (2) UHF/VHF Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (2) Radar Altimeter Antenna (1) Radar Altimeter Antenna (2) Engine Intake Barrier Filter Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (2) Turboshaft Engine Light Harpoon Landing Restraint System Modular Mission Payload (EO/IR Laser Pointer and Range Finder) UCARS Antenna Meeting the Armed Forces System Needs Providing organic Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Targeting (ISR/T) capabilities Provides Over The Horizon (OTH) targeting Provides real-time Battle Damage Assessment Implements network centric warfare concepts with communications relay capability Defense IT Standard Registry/Joint Technical Architecture (DIST/JTA) compliant Fully interoperable between land and sea-based Tactical Control Systems Legacy of High Reliability Based on a Schweizer Aircraft commercial airframe with over 20 million ight hours, the Fire Scout vehicle incorporates reliable turbine power (160 million ight hours) using standard NATO heavy fuel. Leveraging from this FAA certied aircraft with commonality of over 50 percent of the mechanical parts, the servicing and logistical processes are well known, proven and documented. This low risk approach for the airframe allows effective maturation of the entire system within a short development schedule. UCARS Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Electro-Optical Image Infrared Image Ready to Deliver The MQ-8B Fire Scout provides an unprecedented ability to detect, identify, and target tactical threats at sea or ashore. Fire Scouts ability to y multiple payloads such as radar and electro-optical/infrared sensors allows downlink of broad area surveillance and target-specic full motion video to decision makers. Fire Scout provides continuous situational awareness and proven reliability, exibility, and maintainability. Already on contract with the U.S. Navy, Fire Scout will dramatically expand capacity to gather intelligence and act with devastating speed. Northrop Grummans Transformational Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle system provides unprecedented situation awareness and precision targeting support for U.S. Armed Forces of the future. The MQ-8B Fire Scout has the ability to autonomously take off and land on any aviation-capable warship and at prepared and unprepared landing zones in proximity to the soldier in contact. The Northrop Grumman VTUAV system is based on a highly reliable civilian Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) helicopter. The advanced ground control facilities encompass the U.S. Navys Tactical Control System (TCS) software developed for Navy ships, tactical data links and communications relay capability. A modular mission payload allows continued growth for new sensors. With a total vehicle endurance greater than eight hours, the Fire Scout is capable of continuous operations, providing coverage 110 nm (200 km) from the launch site. Using a baseline payload that includes electro- optical/infrared sensors (EO/IR) and a laser range nder/illuminator, the Fire Scout system can nd, identify, track and illuminate targets, provide accurate targeting data to strike platforms, and perform battle damage assessment. Acting as a communications node within the Joint C4ISR architecture, Fire Scout will increase the effectiveness and exibility of other platforms. The Navy program is managed by the U.S. Navys PMA-266 Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Program Ofce at Patuxent River, Maryland. Fully Autonomous Operations No pilot in the loop required for launch or recovery Manual override capability In fight mission plan update capability Light Harpoon restraint system Expanded fight envelope Minimal impact on host ship operations Minimal support personnel requirements System Requirements Autonomous operations from all air-capable ships >8 hours continuous system on station coverage Ceiling and airspeed: 20,000 ft, 115+ kts >5 hours on station time (single vehicle) at 110 nm Interoperability through Tactical Control System (TCS) software and STANAG 4586 Compliance Payload Features Modular Mission Payloads (MMP) Plug and play product Baseline MMP capability EO/IR laser range nder illuminator Voice/data communication relay 600 pound payload lift capacity Growth payloads Tactical Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR/MTI), Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS), Trafc Collision Avoidance System (TCAS), SATCOM, Sonobuoy delivery, expendables employment, threat countermeasures, mine detection, etc... The Fire Scout System (STANAG Compliant) provides fully autonomous operation of the air vehicle and payload with the exibility of a wide variety of override commands available to the operators through the Control System (CS). The CS also displays payload imagery, air vehicle status and situational information to the operators. Payload information can be disseminated via the C4I architecture to GCCS-M and other C4I nodes. All data is available through the signal entry panel, including RS-170, RGB, Fiber Optics, Ethernet, ATM, FDDI and Fiber Optic Ethernet. The CS houses an air vehicle operator (AVO), a mission payload operator (MPO) and a mission commander (MC). The Control System for Fire Scout in the Navy is integrated into the Integrated Communication Center (ICC) aboard Littoral Combat Ship. There are also versions of this system that are constructed to be contained in a roll on/roll off shelter or mounted on a High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) for land-based and mobile operations. The CS has the ability to perform pre-mission planning for the air vehicle and payload. It can also upload new missions real-time and perform override control of both vehicle and payload. MQ-8B Fire Scout VTUAV Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System Supplying Organic Intelligence and Targeting Capability in the Littoral Battle Space Force Multiplier... The Fire Scout System allows for the full use of multiple onboard sensors and payloads for Over the Horizon Targeting, Communications Relay, Threat Detection, Intelligence Gathering, Precision Strike Support and real time Battle Damage Assessment. December 18, 2006 The MQ-8B Fire Scout successfully completes its rst ight at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, MD. During this test series, the vehicle executed its missions fully autonomously. The Fire Scout System enables U.S. Armed Forces operations to be conducted with seamless control from ships or from land-based control segments. Real-time data can be shared with Navy, Marines, Army, and Homeland Security Forces and targeting data can be provided to all Services potential shooters, reducing engagement timelines and minimizing their exposure to enemy re. Versatility Equals Capability Navy Manned-Unmanned Operations Command Information Center (CIC) Navy Control System (CS) UHF/VHF (3) Shielded Avionics Compartment Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (1) Flight Control Actuators Folding Rotors Fuel Tank UHF/VHF Antenna (2) UHF/VHF Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (1) GPS Antenna (2) Radar Altimeter Antenna (1) Radar Altimeter Antenna (2) Engine Intake Barrier Filter Tactical Common Datalink Antenna (2) Turboshaft Engine Light Harpoon Landing Restraint System Modular Mission Payload (EO/IR Laser Pointer and Range Finder) UCARS Antenna Meeting the Armed Forces System Needs Providing organic Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Targeting (ISR/T) capabilities Provides Over The Horizon (OTH) targeting Provides real-time Battle Damage Assessment Implements network centric warfare concepts with communications relay capability Defense IT Standard Registry/Joint Technical Architecture (DIST/JTA) compliant Fully interoperable between land and sea-based Tactical Control Systems Legacy of High Reliability Based on a Schweizer Aircraft commercial airframe with over 20 million ight hours, the Fire Scout vehicle incorporates reliable turbine power (160 million ight hours) using standard NATO heavy fuel. Leveraging from this FAA certied aircraft with commonality of over 50 percent of the mechanical parts, the servicing and logistical processes are well known, proven and documented. This low risk approach for the airframe allows effective maturation of the entire system within a short development schedule. UCARS Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Electro-Optical Image Infrared Image Operational Scenario The Fire Scout VTUAV system is capable of operating from any air-capable Navy ship and will be primarily based aboard the Navys newest surface combatant, the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS). Fire Scout is a critical contributor to the ships three primary missions: Anti-Submarine Warfare, Surface Warfare, and Mine Warfare. Operational concepts allow for the Fire Scout to transition through multiple roles while it provides support throughout the Joint Battle Space. Through rapid reconguration facilitated by modular payload architecture and dened interface specications, Fire Scout is able to adapt to the mission at hand and provide real time ISR/T to the operational commander. Fire Scout is the perfect asset to detect and engage swarming boats, ensure landing areas are clear for amphibious craft, provide overhead communications relay, and conduct intelligence gathering and targeting on relocatable targets. As battleeld preparation continues and enemy forces are engaged, the Fire Scout can provide Over-the-Horizon (OTH) targeting for U.S.Navy ship-launched weapons or land-based artillery to strike targets that are well beyond normal Line- of-Sight (LOS) sensors. Fire Scout missions will be expanded through spiral development of requirements and capabilities. These would include maritime surveillance radar, signals and communications intelligence gathering, magnetic anomaly detectors, and satellite communications. The Fire Scout VTUAV will provide additional capabilities as it increases the number of payloads employed and will allow the operational commander to dramatically augment his situational awareness and responsiveness. AEROSPACE SYSTEMS STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION MQ-8B FIRE SCOUT Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System MQ-8B Fire Scout Air Vehicle Specications United States Navy Air Vehicle Fuselage Length (with Dual Payload Nose): 23.95 ft (7.3 m) Fuselage Width: 6.20 ft (1.9 m) Length (with Blades Folded Forward): 30.03 ft (9.2 m) Rotor Diameter: 27.50 ft (8.4 m) Height (Top of Tail Antenna): 9.71 ft (2.9 m) Gross Weight: 3,150 lbs (1428.8 kg) Engine: Rolls Royce 250-C20W Turboshaft Engine Speed: 115+ Knots Ceiling: 20,000 ft (6.1 km) Endurance Total Flight Time with Baseline Payload: 8+ Hours Total Flight Time with EO/IR + Radar: 7+ Hours Total Flight Time with Maximum Payload: 5+ Hours Payloads 23.95 ft 9.71 ft 7.85 ft 13.75 ft P.O. Box 509066 San Diego California 92150-9066 www.northropgrumman.com/unmanned Contact Info: Joe Fleming (858) 618-6737 Email: joseph.feming@ngc.com Approved for Public Release Distribution Unlimited NAVAIR 09-413 Dated 8 February 2010 Revised Cover: NAVAIR 10-604 Dated 28 April 2010 VM00-AS-4873_02_13 NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION Star SAFIRE III EO/IR/LRF U.S. Navy Baseline EO/IR/LRF Mine Detector UHF/VHF Comm Relay Maritime Radar Operational Scenario The Fire Scout VTUAV system is capable of operating from any air-capable Navy ship and will be primarily based aboard the Navys newest surface combatant, the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS). Fire Scout is a critical contributor to the ships three primary missions: Anti-Submarine Warfare, Surface Warfare, and Mine Warfare. Operational concepts allow for the Fire Scout to transition through multiple roles while it provides support throughout the Joint Battle Space. Through rapid reconguration facilitated by modular payload architecture and dened interface specications, Fire Scout is able to adapt to the mission at hand and provide real time ISR/T to the operational commander. Fire Scout is the perfect asset to detect and engage swarming boats, ensure landing areas are clear for amphibious craft, provide overhead communications relay, and conduct intelligence gathering and targeting on relocatable targets. As battleeld preparation continues and enemy forces are engaged, the Fire Scout can provide Over-the-Horizon (OTH) targeting for U.S.Navy ship-launched weapons or land-based artillery to strike targets that are well beyond normal Line- of-Sight (LOS) sensors. Fire Scout missions will be expanded through spiral development of requirements and capabilities. These would include maritime surveillance radar, signals and communications intelligence gathering, magnetic anomaly detectors, and satellite communications. The Fire Scout VTUAV will provide additional capabilities as it increases the number of payloads employed and will allow the operational commander to dramatically augment his situational awareness and responsiveness. AEROSPACE SYSTEMS STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION MQ-8B FIRE SCOUT Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle System MQ-8B Fire Scout Air Vehicle Specications United States Navy Air Vehicle Fuselage Length (with Dual Payload Nose): 23.95 ft (7.3 m) Fuselage Width: 6.20 ft (1.9 m) Length (with Blades Folded Forward): 30.03 ft (9.2 m) Rotor Diameter: 27.50 ft (8.4 m) Height (Top of Tail Antenna): 9.71 ft (2.9 m) Gross Weight: 3,150 lbs (1428.8 kg) Engine: Rolls Royce 250-C20W Turboshaft Engine Speed: 115+ Knots Ceiling: 20,000 ft (6.1 km) Endurance Total Flight Time with Baseline Payload: 8+ Hours Total Flight Time with EO/IR + Radar: 7+ Hours Total Flight Time with Maximum Payload: 5+ Hours Payloads 23.95 ft 9.71 ft 7.85 ft 13.75 ft P.O. Box 509066 San Diego California 92150-9066 www.northropgrumman.com/unmanned Contact Info: Joe Fleming (858) 618-6737 Email: joseph.feming@ngc.com Approved for Public Release Distribution Unlimited NAVAIR 09-413 Dated 8 February 2010 Revised Cover: NAVAIR 10-604 Dated 28 April 2010 VM00-AS-4873_02_13 NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION STRIKE AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS DIVISION Star SAFIRE III EO/IR/LRF U.S. Navy Baseline EO/IR/LRF Mine Detector UHF/VHF Comm Relay Maritime Radar