06 January 2024

X-65 has the potential to change the future of aircraft design

The X-65 will feature a 30-foot (9-meter) wingspan and weigh 7,000 pounds (3,200 kg), making it roughly the size of the T-38 trainer aircraft used by NASA astronauts and the U.S. military. It will be able to reach speeds of up to Mach 0.7, which DARPA says will "make the flight-test results immediately relevant to real world aircraft design."
The X-65 will even feature a modular design, meaning its wings and active flow control systems will be able to be swapped out in the future, allowing it to be used for additional testing in the future after the conclusion of the CRANE program. 
DARPA's wild X-65 CRANE aircraft aims for 1st flight in summer 2025 | Space

DARPA and Aurora Flight Sciences have begun building the first full-scale X-65 aircraft to demonstrate a new method of flight control that uses no external moving parts. The X-65 is an experimental jet being developed by the Control of Revolutionary Aircraft with Novel Effectors (CRANE) program overseen by DARPA, (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), the Pentagon's research and development agency. Since the first aircraft were invented, they have been controlled by moving surfaces such as rudders, flaps, elevators and ailerons. 

RelatedThis wild DARPA CRANE X-plane could be a giant leap in aircraft design

However, in order to minimize risk, the first X-65 demonstrator will feature both conventional moving control surfaces and what are known as active flow control (AFC) actuators, the jets of pressurized air. 
DARPA and Aurora Flight Sciences Building Full Scale X-65 Plane With No  Moving Control | NextBigFuture.com
DARPA Designates Revolutionary X-65 Aircraft
Meet the X-65: DARPA's New Plane Has No External Control Surfaces

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has given Aurora Flight Sciences the green light to build a full-scale model of the X-65 — an experimental unmanned aircraft designed to be able to fly without flaps, rudders or other exterior-moving parts.

Aurora announced Wednesday that it has successfully completed the critical design review and begun fabricating the drone, part of DARPA’s Control of Revolutionary Aircraft with Novel Effectors (CRANE) program aimed at proving and maturing active flow control (AFC) technology.

The Virginia-based company and the Pentagon agency are looking to conduct the first flight of the X-plane in the summer of 2025.

“As we move into the manufacturing phase, we are getting ever closer to fulfilling the goal of validating AFC technology and helping to open the design trade space for future applications. X-65 has the potential to change the future of aircraft design,” Kevin Uleck, CRANE program director at Aurora Flight Sciences, a Boeing subsidiary, said in a statement.

Aurora Flight Sciences begins manufacturing X-65 drone for DARPA

DARPA plans to begin flight testing for the X-plane in the summer of 2025.
Artist rendering of the X-65 (DARPA image)

The X-65’s sleek, aerodynamic design features AFC effectors across the platform’s flying surfaces that are used to control its roll, pitch and yaw. The technology allows for operators to maneuver the system with bursts of air instead of external moving parts, such as the wing flaps and tail rudders found on most of today’s planes.

According to DARPA, removing these parts could offer a range of performance enhancements for future aircraft by reducing their weight, drag and mechanical complexity. 

“The X-65 is a technology demonstrator, and its distinctive, diamond-like wing shape is designed to help us maximize what we can learn about AFC in full-scale, real-world tests,” Richard Wlezien, DARPA’s program manager for CRANE, said in a statement.

  • Aurora Flight Sciences and Lockheed Martin were both tapped by the agency in 2021 to conduct preliminary design work for phase 1 of the CRANE program. 
  • Aurora eventually moved on to phase 2 as sole contractor, receiving a $42 million deal in 2023 to complete detailed design work and develop flight software and controls. 
  • The contract also included an option for a phase 3 manufacturing period.

According to DARPA, the full-scale X-65 built in phase 3 will weigh over 7,000 pounds, have a 30-foot wingspan and be able to reach speeds of up to Mach 0.7 — around 537 miles per hour. The modular design will feature replaceable outboard wings and AFC effectors — meaning various AFC designs could be tested on the X-plane in the future.

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The demonstrator aircraft will incorporate mechanical flaps and rudders that are intended to serve as a baseline for the platform’s performance, as well as AFC effectors that will replace moving surfaces throughout the testing cycle.
  • “The X-65 conventional surfaces are like training wheels to help us understand how AFC can be used in place of traditional flaps and rudders,” Wlezien said. 
  • “We’ll have sensors in place to monitor how the AFC effectors’ performance compares with traditional control mechanisms, and these data will help us better understand how AFC could revolutionize both military and commercial craft in the future.”
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Mikayla Easley

Written by Mikayla Easley

Mikayla Easley reports on the Pentagon’s acquisition and use of emerging technologies. Prior to joining DefenseScoop, she covered national security and the defense industry for National Defense Magazine. She received a BA in Russian language and literature from the University of Michigan and a MA in journalism from the University of Missouri. 
You can follow her on Twitter @MikaylaEasley

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