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US Air Force Test Flights Focus on Off-the-shelf Options


This Aug. 4, 2017, photo provided by the U.S. Air Force shows a Textron Scorpion experimental aircraft as it conducts handling and flying quality maneuvers above White Sands Missile Range near Alamagordo, N.M. The Scorpion is participating in test flights for the light-attack experiment known as the OA-X initiative being conducted Aug. 9, 2017, at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.
This Aug. 4, 2017, photo provided by the U.S. Air Force shows a Textron Scorpion experimental aircraft as it conducts handling and flying quality maneuvers above White Sands Missile Range near Alamagordo, N.M. The Scorpion is participating in test flights for the light-attack experiment known as the OA-X initiative being conducted Aug. 9, 2017, at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.

Over a U.S. Air Force base in the New Mexico desert, pilots on Wednesday tested some off-the-shelf options as the military looks for its next light-attack aircraft.

Test flights for the experiment known as the OA-X initiative are being conducted at Holloman Air Force Base. Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson, a former New Mexico congresswoman, was on hand along with other top officials as pilots put the planes through their paces.

The scenarios are designed to emulate combat missions and other flights such as search and rescue and reconnaissance.

The Air Force earlier this year invited the aviation and aerospace industry to put forth data on readily available planes that would meet the service's needs for a small, low-cost aircraft that could support missions on the ground while being easily maintained. The top candidates were then invited to Holloman to show off their capabilities.

U.S. Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican who is chairman of the Armed Services Committee and a supporter of the experiment, said Wednesday that the event is aimed at helping the military procure the tools it needs more quickly, efficiently and affordably.

"Our adversaries are modernizing to deploy future capabilities aimed at eroding the U.S. military advantage — and reversing that trend will require a new, innovative approach to acquisition and procurement,'' he said in a statement.

Not a competition

Air Force officials have said they do not consider the test flights as a competition since the event won't necessarily result in any decisions about which planes to acquire.

Some have suggested that a new light-attack plane could partly replace the A-10, which had been marked for retirement by the Obama administration. Air Force officials have disputed those claims and the latest military spending proposals call for keeping the nation's 283 A-10s flying for the foreseeable future.

Some congressional members have pointed to the acquisition of light-attack planes as a way to lessen the burden on the service's fighter fleet and reduce operating costs related to the A-10 and other fighters such as the F-16 and the F-15.

The Senate Armed Services Committee earlier this summer added more than $1 billion to the proposed military budget for the OA-X initiative. If the measure survives negotiations, the Air Force could use the funding to buy a fleet of light-attack and observation aircraft to bolster existing resources.

The testing includes Textron Aviation's Scorpion jet and its AT-6 Wolverine turboprop and the A-29 Super Tucano, another turboprop manufactured in Florida by Sierra Nevada Corp. and partner Embraer Defense & Security. AirTractor and L3's AT-802L Longsword also is part of the experiment.

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