06 May 2024
by Zach Rosenberg
The MV-22 (pictured) is to soon receive new engine nacelles to be followed by a refreshed cockpit. Longer-term modifications may include a new drivetrain and perhaps even new wings. (US Navy)
The V-22 is likely to fly through 2050, and upgrades are in the planning process to allow it to reach that age, US Marine Corps (USMC) Colonel Brian Taylor, V-22 programme manager at Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR), said at the Modern Day Marine 2024 conference in Washington, DC on 30 April.
In the near term, NAVAIR is working to centralise the V-22 fleet in a common configuration and improve maintainability.
“When you purchase aircraft over about a 30-year span, you end up with some configuration challenges, and that’s what we’re still working through,” Col Taylor said. “You’re going to see things like block modifications: how do we get the aircraft to be closer to one another across this wide expanse of airframes that we bought and the different blocks they were in?”
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