<b>Which part of this did you choose to overlook? oh wait all of it lol
"“The V-22 is much less susceptible to vortex ring state,” Schultz said. “It takes a lot more to get a V-22 into the vortex ring state than any other helicopter.”
The tilt rotor technology even allows for a quicker recovery from this problem by tilting the rotor forward from the helicopter mode and flying out of the vortex ring state, said Lt. Col. Kevin Gross, the chief test pilot from the Marine Corps for the program. To further safeguard against the problem, a device was installed that gives pilots 18 seconds of warning that they might be entering vortex ring state."</b>
Ahem, from your own link:
http://www.aviationtoday.com/cgi/rw/sho ... tebook.htm
"Experts agree that any rotorcraft is vulnerable to vortex ring state. (Macdonald's flight test work, therefore, may help advance the safety of all helicopters eventually.) <b>Relative to the phenomenon, though, the V-22's side-by-side rotor design poses a unique problem. The likelihood is that one rotor will enter vortex ring state before the other, resulting in the kind of severe roll-over seen in the Marana crash sequence.</b>
So tell me now again who's leaving out information?
And please do explain to me which aircraft the MV-22 is replacing for 107 mil per, cause i sure can figure it out.
Moving on...
<b>"Yes, that's why you PLAN things."</b>
A) Murphy's law of combat #1: No plan survives first contact with the enemy.
B) Many operational shipborne USMC operations are initiated with almost no warning at all.
C) Regardless of the level of planning the Osprey is claimed to physically take much longer to load than either a MH-60 or a CH-53.
D) And it costs 107 million dollars.
If it is indeed the hangar queen that it is claimed to be(According to GAO it requires 70% more maint hours/flight hour than the 40yo CH46
http://www.d-n-i.net/fcs/comments/c401.htm ), then it's lowered availability rate is going to combine with the above problems and further exacerbate the issue resulting in even longer turnaround times.
<b>Osprey will still get there first with more range than MH-53 by a wide margin and let the amphibs stand off farther at sea.</b>
The Amphibs <b>MUST</b> be within a maximum of approx 50nm from the coast because that's what all the slung load requirements max range stipulations are(for Osprey, MH60, and for CH-53Es). No can fight without outsized slung loads(arty, vehicles, palleted ammo, fuel bladders, etc, etc).
Got that? Forget that argument, it is DOA.
50nm is the REAL WORLD range an air assault is going to occur...maximum. Don't tell the enemy...
PS: the USN and USMC CH-53E Super Stallion is the relevant aircraft here, not the USAF MH-53E Pave Low.
<img src="http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b343/m21sniper/OnTheJobEnhanced.jpg" border=0>
<b>"One post, One Kill".</b>