http://query.nytimes.com/search/full-pa ... A9659C8B63
Pentagon Orders 11 New Ospreys
WASHINGTON, May 15 -- The Pentagon ordered 11 new V-22 Osprey aircraft today for $817 million, helping a program plagued by deadly crashes and other problems.
The Osprey had been in danger of being eliminated after 23 marines were killed in crashes during testing in 2000. The aircraft's maker, a joint venture between the Boeing Company and Textron's Bell Helicopter unit, had to redesign parts to fix hydraulic and other problems.
The Osprey has fixed wings and propellers that can tilt upward so it can take off and land like a helicopter, then tilt forward so it can fly like an airplane. The Marine Corps wants to use it to replace its aging fleet of transport helicopters. The Air Force and Navy are interested in it, too.
The Osprey has a longer range and flies faster and more quietly than the Marines' current fleet of transport helicopters.
A design flaw was blamed for a December 2000 crash in North Carolina that killed four Marines. The flaw allowed electrical and hydraulic lines to rub together while the rotors were being tilted.
The deadliest crash occurred in an unusually rapid descent. Nineteen Marines died in that crash, in April 2000, near Tucson.
"Retreat, hell! We just got here!"-Captain Lloyd Williams, 2nd Marine Division, Belleau Wood, France, WWI