Schweizer RU-38 Twin Condor

The Schweizer RU-38 Twin Condor is a two or three-seat, fixed gear, low wing, twin boom covert reconnaissance aircraft.[6][7]

RU-38 Twin Condor
Role Covert reconnaissance aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Schweizer Aircraft Corporation
Designer Leslie Schweizer
First flight 31 May 1995[1]
Introduction May 1997[1]
Status In production
Primary users US Coast Guard[2]
US Dept of Justice[3]
Produced RU-38A 1995-1997[4]
RU-38B 2004-2005[3]
Number built RU-38A - 2[5]
RU-38B - 3[5]
Developed from RG-8A

RU-38 is the US military designation for the aircraft, indicating Utility, Reconnaissance. The Schweizer company model number is Schweizer SA 2-38A Condor and, in its three-seat configuration, Schweizer SA 3-38A Condor[8]

Based on the Schweizer SGM 2-37 motor glider, a total of five RU-38s were produced between 1995 and 2005. The aircraft remains in production by Sikorsky Aircraft after acquiring Schweizer.[5][9]

Background

The development of the Schweizer SGM 2-37 motor glider for training use at the United States Air Force Academy led to two reconnaissance versions of that design, carrying the company model numbers SA 2-37A and SA 2-37B. In Central Intelligence Agency, US Army and US Coast Guard service these were designated RG-8A and B. The RG-8s were employed in border security and surveillance missions.[1][2][10]

In the mid-1990s the Coast Guard decided that the aircraft would be more useful if their capabilities were improved to include night operations by the addition of more mission sensor equipment. Discussions with Schweizer Aircraft resulted in a plan to upgrade two RG-8As and build one new aircraft to provide a total of three.[1]

Development

The RU-38 was intended to fulfill both the low altitude, quiet, over water/hostile terrain reconnaissance role and also the high altitude standoff surveillance role.[6]

The design missions for the RU-23A were:[1][2][6][7]

  • Border integrity
  • Counter-terrorism surveillance
  • Drug enforcement
  • Electronic intelligence
  • Fishery patrols
  • Illegal alien surveillance
  • Intelligence collection
  • Maritime patrol
  • Pollution patrol & environmental monitoring
  • Search and Rescue

In converting to the new RU-38A configuration, the conventional RG-8A airframe was greatly modified by:[1][2][7]

  • Removing the single 235 hp (175 kW) Lycoming O-540-B powerplant
  • Installing two Teledyne Continental Motors GIO-550A engines with a 3:2 gear reduction to 2267 operating rpm. The engines are mounted one in the nose and the other in the rear of the fuselage.
  • Enlarging the crew compartment
  • Improving the engine mufflers
  • Increasing the wingspan from 56.5 ft (17.22m) to 84.13 ft (25.65 m)
  • Changing the single tail fin to a twin-boom configuration with two fins
  • Greatly enlarged sensor bays
  • Improved noise signature reduction
  • Tricycle landing gear replacing the conventional landing gear

RU-38A

The resulting aircraft bears little resemblance to the original TG-8. Installation of the twin-boom pods permits the carriage of more sensors. The left-hand pod houses an AN/APN-215(V) color multi-function X-band sea search radar with mapping capabilities. The right-hand pod houses the AN/AAQ-15 forward looking infrared (FLIR) and Low-Light TV enhanced vision systems.[1][2][7]

For navigation the RU-38A originally carried both OMEGA and GPS receivers, although the Omega has since been removed with that system's withdrawal from service in 1997. The aircraft also has HF, VHF and UHF radios for voice and encrypted voice communications, plus direction finding. The crew may also use night vision goggles.[1][2][7]

The aircraft has no flaps and instead retains the top and bottom surface divebrakes of its sailplane ancestors. Maximum take-off weight of the RU-38A is 5300 lb (2404 kg)[1]

The RU-38A is designed to transit to its operational area with both engines operating. Once in the surveillance area the rear engine would normally be shut down and the aircraft operated in "quiet surveillance mode". The second engine would be available for use in an emergency and for return to base at faster speed.[1][2][7]

The first Coast Guard RG-8A was returned to Schweizer for conversion to RU-38A status on 24 January 1994. The initial plan called for the conversion of two RG-8As and then fabrication of one new RU-38A.[1]

The first flight of the converted aircraft took place on 31 May 1995. The second USCG RG-8A aircraft that was earmarked for RU-38A upgrade crashed near Puerto Rico in 1996. As a result, the program was reduced to provide only two RU-38As to the USCG. The loss of the RG-8A delayed the program for many months and it was not completed until May 1997.[1]

The first RU-38 was tested by the Air Force 445th Flight Test Squadron at Edwards AFB on behalf of the Coast Guard, starting in July 1998. The airplane flew some 100 test flights during the four-month program.[2]

By September 1999 the two converted RU-38As had been delivered to the Coast Guard in Miami, Florida for operational employment. The RU-38As were flown in drug interdiction missions over the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, but they were reportedly grounded during 2000, due to problems with the aircraft meeting mission requirements or serviceability.[2][7]

RU-38B

The company further improved the aircraft by replacing the two piston engines with two Rolls Royce Allison 250-B17F turboprop engines which allowed raising the gross weight to 7200 lbs (3265 kg). The new aircraft carries the military designation of RU-38B.[6]

The RU-38B has 140 cubic feet (4.0 cu m) of payload space with a payload weight of 800 lbs (363 kg) available. The payload bays all have large access doors and are located both in the tailbooms and also behind the pilot and co-pilot seats in the fuselage. The latter space can also accommodate a third crew member, if required. Using pallet-mounted sensor packages the aircraft can be quickly changed from one mission to another.[6]

The RU-38B is able to achieve quiet operation while loitering by using a propeller speed as low as 1000 rpm. This is possible because the sailplane-derived wing is efficient and flight at low airspeed can be sustained with low power.[6] Exhaust from the front engine is routed overwing, reducing the noise footprint.[11]

Two RU-38Bs were delivered to the US Department of Justice, one in 2004 and one in 2005.[3]

The RU-38B model was still being actively marketed by Schweizer in 2011.[6]

Certification

Neither the RU-38A or B was certified by the Federal Aviation Administration. Instead all aircraft operate as experimental aircraft in the Research and Development category.[4]

Operators

 United States

Specifications (RU-38B)

Data from Schweizer Aircraft[6]

General characteristics

  • Crew: two in side-by-side seating or three, with two pilots in side-by-side seating and one sensor operator in the rear
  • Length: 35.1 ft (10.7 m)
  • Wingspan: 84.13 ft (25.64 m)
  • Height: ()
  • Wing area: 334.2 ft2 (31.05 m2)
  • Airfoil: Wortmann Fx 61-163
  • Empty weight: 4265 lb (1934 kg)
  • Useful load: 2935 lb (1331 kg)
  • Loaded weight: 7200 lb (3265 kg)
  • Max. takeoff weight: 7200 lb (3265 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Rolls Royce Allison 250-B17F Constant Speed, Full Feather, () each

Performance

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References

  1. Stoll, Alex (September 2001). "Schweizer RU-38A Twin Condor". Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  2. Pike, John (April 2005). "Schweizer RU-38B Twin Condor". Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  3. Federal Aviation Administration (June 2008). "FAA Registry". Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  4. FAA (June 2008). "FAA Registry". Archived from the original on 28 September 2006. Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  5. FAA (June 2008). "FAA Registry". Archived from the original on 15 August 2011. Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  6. Schweizer Aircraft Corp (2006). "Reconnaissance Aircraft: RU-38B". Retrieved 14 July 2008.
  7. Spy Flight (n.d.). "Schweizer RU-38B Twin Condor". Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  8. Smithsonian Institution (2004). "Directory of Airplanes". Retrieved 3 May 2008.
  9. "Reconnaissance Fixed Wing Aircraft". sikorsky.com. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  10. World Aircraft Directory (n.d.). "Schweizer SA 2-37A". Retrieved 3 June 2008.
  11. Air & Space/Smithsonian, The Sounds of Silence, July 2004 issue, p. 13
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